Israel seized a minister in Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh’s Cabinet on Saturday and pounded Hamas targets in the Gaza Strip as part of an expanded campaign against the ruling Islamist group.
Israel renewed strikes on targets that included a guardhouse outside Haniyeh’s home after Gaza militants behind rocket attacks against Israel signalled they might agree to a truce.
Militants fired at least five rockets at Israel on Saturday, causing no injuries, the army said.
The Palestinian Minister of State, Wasfi Kabha of Hamas, was arrested in an early-morning raid on his village near the West Bank city of Jenin, a Palestinian security official said.
An Israeli army spokesperson said a Hamas member was arrested, but did not identify him.
Kabha is the second Cabinet minister seized by Israeli forces since Thursday when troops arrested Education Minister Naser al-Shaer of Hamas and 32 other officials in the occupied West Bank.
”We have urged the United States and the European Union to intervene to release the ministers and lawmakers,” said Saeb Erekat, an aide to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas of Fatah. ”This step does not help to achieve calm.”
The arrests have also raised concerns in Washington and at the United Nations.
In the Gaza Strip, Israeli air strikes early on Saturday hit five militant targets, the army said. At least three people, all passers-by, were hurt, doctors said. The barrage came hours after Hamas’s armed wing and other militant factions said they were considering a proposal by Abbas for a ceasefire in Gaza.
Statehood sought
Previously, militants had said that in order to revive a Gaza truce declared in November, Israel must also agree to cease hostilities in the West Bank, another territory where Palestinians seek statehood. Israel rebuffed that demand.
During crisis talks between faction leaders in Gaza, militants said they could accept a new, mutual ceasefire in Gaza alone, according to Fatah officials. Fatah said the militants gave Israel until Sunday to respond.
Other militant groups denied any commitments had been made. They said they were weighing a proposal made by Abbas for a trial, month-long truce in Gaza.
Israeli officials had no immediate comment. Since violence surged earlier this month, Israeli officials have rebuffed calls for a ceasefire, arguing it would give Hamas time to rearm.
The new Palestinian truce efforts underscore the precariousness of a power-sharing deal between Hamas and Fatah. Even though they are partners in a two-month-old unity government, fighting between Hamas and Fatah killed about 50 Palestinians earlier this month. The latest ceasefire appears to be holding, but tensions remain high.
Egypt has sought to step up its mediating role. A Fatah delegation was due in Cairo on Saturday for talks. A Hamas spokesperson said the group would also be prepared to meet Egyptian officials.
Hamas has die-hard hostility to the Jewish state. But it is aware the fighting has deepened Palestinian rancour at the government, crippled by a Western aid embargo imposed over Hamas’s refusal to recognise Israel and renounce violence.
Israel’s air strikes have killed at least 38 Palestinians, including about 25 fighters, militant groups say.
More than 220 rockets have been fired into Israel since May 15, ending six months of relative calm. One killed an Israeli woman in the town of Sderot near the Gaza border. — Reuters
Additional reporting by Wael al-Ahmad in Jenin; and Avida Landau and Dan Williams in Jerusalem