The New York Times-20080127-Egypt Warns Hamas About Border Violence

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Egypt Warns Hamas About Border Violence

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Egyptian riot police used armored vehicles to try to restrict Gazans from taking cars into Egypt on Saturday, and the Egyptian foreign minister warned of provocations at the border. He said that at least 36 Egyptian security officers had been hospitalized, some in critical condition, after confrontations with Palestinians.

In a thinly veiled rebuke to the militant group Hamas, which runs Gaza, the Egyptian minister, Ahmed Aboul Gheit, said in Cairo that Egypt would show restraint but not at the cost of Egyptian lives.

The Egyptian decision has been to allow in the sons of Gaza to ease their suffering, he said. This was the Egyptian decision taken a few days ago and we are still holding to it.

He added that the Egyptians wanted to regulate the entry and exit of Gazans and talk with the concerned parties to devise a new border system. But it was unlikely that Egypt would tolerate a continued confrontation with Hamas.

After Israel severely tightened its import restrictions on Gaza, to try to force a reduction of rockets and mortar shells fired into Israel, Hamas breached the border with Egypt in nearly 20 places early Wednesday morning.

Hamas explosives blew down large sections of the wall that Israel had built just inside Gaza to protect its forces, which used to patrol along the Egyptian border in what was otherwise a no-man's land. The border itself is marked by a low concrete wall topped with barbed wire, which is easily breached.

Traffic over the border remained heavy on Saturday, but residents of the Egyptian towns Rafah and El Arish reported severe shortages of supplies and a growing fatigue with the Palestinian influx.

In El Arish, Said Aghlaby, 48, a taxi driver, said: It's getting tiring. We can't take all these people. They're sleeping in the streets.

He said he had to wait in line seven hours for gasoline, and could not get a full tank. I've never seen so much garbage, he said, and I'm used to seeing garbage: I've lived in Cairo.

Mr. Aghlaby said he was happy to help the Palestinians.

They've been through a lot of suffering, and we can't refuse to help them, he said. But it can't go on forever.

In Rafah, a cafe was down to its last 12 bottles of water, which were priced at the equivalent of 90 cents, instead of the normal 27 cents.

But in Gaza, Egyptian cars and trucks were also seen, delivering supplies to stores and supermarkets as well as sightseeing.

In an interview published on Saturday, President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt, decrying the use of violence and the factional struggle among Palestinians between Fatah and Hamas, invited both groups to Cairo for talks.

Hamas accepted; the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, repeated his stance that he would not meet with Hamas until it apologized for its coup in Gaza and handed power back to the Palestinian Authority.

An Abbas aide, Nabil Shaath, said that Mr. Abbas would travel to Egypt after meeting the Israeli prime minister, Ehud Olmert, here on Sunday. Mr. Abbas will once again push Mr. Olmert to accept his presidential guards' taking control of the Gazan side of the crossings from Israel and of the border with Egypt, despite Hamas's control over Gaza.

Israeli troops remained on high alert along its border with Egypt, watching for militants from Gaza trying enter Israel through the Sinai desert.

[Illustration]PHOTO: Women and children by a road in Gaza near the breached border wall at the Rafah crossing into Egypt. Egyptians reported severe shortages of supplies because of the Palestinian influx. (PHOTOGRAPH BY SHAWN BALDWIN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES)
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