Armed Men Storm Palestinian Office as Hostages Freed in Gaza

Armed Men Storm Palestinian Office as Hostages Freed in Gaza

About 50 men, masked and armed, have occupied a Palestinian government office in the Gaza Strip to demand jobs, witnesses and a spokesman for the men said.

The group, members of a political wing of the mainstream Fatah movement, occupied an Interior Ministry office in the Dair al-Balah refugee camp, forced everyone to leave and stood guard outside.

A spokesmen for the men said they wanted jobs.

"Our efforts so far have been fruitless, therefore we have been forced to take action," he told Reuters. "Today we are closing the Interior Ministry and post office to make sure our message gets through."

Border crossing

Separately, about 30 gunmen and relatives of a policeman killed in a gunbattle with a Palestinian clan feud on Thursday stood at a border crossing with Egypt and threatened to bar Palestinian officials from reaching the Rafah terminal, witnesses and security sources said.

Police at the terminal said it was operating normally with European monitors on hand, despite the protest, which was joined by members of the al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades.

Colleagues of the slain officer blocked the same terminal on Friday, effectively shutting the border crossing for several hours.

Israeli raid

In the West Bank on Saturday, Israeli occupation forces stormed the headquarters of Palestinian military intelligence in the city of Jenin, Aljazeera's correspondent in Palestine reported.

The Israeli army is holding two employees at the headquarters, the correspondent said, and has imposed a curfew on the Jenin refugee camp for a second consecutive day.

Hostages freed in Gaza

A British human rights worker and her parents have been freed in the Gaza Strip in what the Palestinian men who captured them said was a gesture of goodwill.

A previously unknown Palestinian group, the Brigades of the Mujahidin, said on Friday it had freed the hostages, kidnapped two days earlier, and it called on Britain and the rest of Europe to put pressure on Israel.

In a video released to the media by the group, a masked gunman stood next to Kate Burton, 25, as he listed demands and threatened that more foreign hostages would be taken if they were not met. Releasing the Burton family was a "gesture of goodwill".

Burton and her parents, Hugh and Helen, had been kidnapped on Wednesday in the chaotic southern town of Rafah, on the border with Egypt.

A Palestinian security official said on Friday: "They are secure and in good hands." A British official said he had been informed of their release and was waiting for them at a meeting point in Gaza City.

Witnesses to the kidnapping said about seven men, armed with automatic rifles, pulled over a car used by Burton and her parents, who were visiting her. The Britons were bundled into a white vehicle that sped away.

Nothing was heard from the kidnappers for two days, whereas other foreigners taken hostage in Gaza have usually been released within hours.

There has been a rash of kidnappings in Gaza since Israel withdrew from the coastal territory in September after 38 years of occupation, a move welcomed internationally as a potential spur to peace but which left the Palestinian Authority struggling for control.

Embarrassment

The kidnapping of the three Britons, and the international attention that it drew, came as a fresh embarrassment for Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president.

A Dutchman and an Australian, teachers at a school in Gaza, were briefly abducted last week by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, which demanded that its leaders be released from jail.

Burton worked for Al Mazen, a group that documents alleged Israeli abuses of Palestinian rights, and her abduction prompted popular protests in Gaza.

PHOTO CAPTION

Masked Palestinian men gather in front the governorate building in the Gaza Strip town of Deir el-Balah, September 2005. (AFP)

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