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ANSA Rassegna Stampa
24.11.2005 L'agenzia stampa accorcia la fedina penale dei terroristi
e crede ciecamente alle fonti palestinesi, non a quelle israeliane

Testata: ANSA
Data: 24 novembre 2005
Pagina: 1
Autore: la redazione
Titolo: «Sospettato essere mandante attentato Hadera in Ottobre»
Giovedì 24 novembre sul sito dell’ANSA si legge una news sull’arresto di un terrorista della Jihad islamica. Nel lancio, non viene spiegato cos’è la Jihad, e definisce la persona arrestata appartenente a quell’organizzazione un "capo", e non un terrorista. Si cita solo uno degli attentati di cui è responsabile, mentre nel sito di haaretz si legge che la persona arrestata è responsabile di diversi attentati terroristici , a partire dal 2003.Si prendono per certe le fonti palestinesi, anzi "alcune fonti" come specifica la news, senza mai spiegare quali sono. Le fonti israeliane invece vengono messe in dubbio. L’articolo inoltre è accompagnato da una foto di una esplosione che non si capisce che cosa dovrebbe rappresentare. Tutto questo concentrato di pregiudizi in 10 righe di news.

Riportiamo per esteso la notizia che si può leggere da questo link
http://www.ansa.it/main/notizie/awnplus/mondo/news/2005-11-24_1929402.html

Sospettato essere mandante attentato Hadera in Ottobre (ANSA) - JENIN (CISGIORDANIA), 24 NOV - Arrestato oggi un capo della Jihad islamica a Jenin, in Cisgiordania, dopo un assedio durato quasi un giorno. Alcune fonti della sicurezza palestinese affermano che dopo l'arresto di Iyad Abu el-Rob, le truppe israeliane hanno bombardato parte dell'edificio di cinque piani in cui il militante si era nascosto. El-Rob e' sospettato di aver pianificato l'attentato suicida dello scorso Ottobre a Hadera, in Israele, nel quale furono uccise sei persone.
Riportiamo inoltre la news prodotta da haaretz, per chi volesse approfondire meglio la questione, e che si può leggere da questo link
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/649120.html

Top Islamic Jihad commander surrenders to IDF troops in Jenin
By Amos Harel and Arnon Regular, Haaretz Correspondents, and The Associated Press
A top Islamic Jihad commander wanted for ordering an October 26 suicide bombing that killed six Israelis in Hadera, surrendered to Israeli troops in West Bank city of Jenin before dawn on Thursday, after a daylong siege in which IDF and police special forces fired into the house where he was holed up, and knocked down the four-story house in which he was hiding.

Since 2003, Abu Rob, 31, directed a number of suicide bombings, including the February suicide bombing at the Stage club in Tel Aviv, in which four Israeli civilians were murdered and 52 wounded, and a suicide attack in the market of the northern town of Hadera in October that killed six Israelis and wounded dozens.

During the 20-hour siege in Jenin, dozens of troops surrounded the building in the town of Jenin in the hunt for Iyad Abu Rob. Witnesses said Abu Rob, a senior commander of Islamic Jihad in the northern West Bank, emerged from the wrecked house after midnight and was taken away by soldiers along with one of his aides, the witnesses said.
Abu Rob is also believed to have coordinated bombings in Netanya and Tel Aviv, Israel Radio reported.

The raid began on Wednesday, when more than 70 army jeeps and 25 armored personnel carriers entered Jenin. Troops announced a curfew over loudspeakers as part of an arrest raid, residents said.

Several armored personnel carriers surrounded the building where Abu Rob was holed up, and snipers took up positions on nearby roofs.

The troops surrounded the structure, firing anti-tank missiles into it as well as "special ammunition," the radio said, without elaboration.

In the course of the Wednesday clashes, troops shot dead a local man who hurled rocks at an army patrol, witnesses and hospital officials said.

Exchanges of fire broke out at several points in the city and 11 Palestinians and three Israeli soldiers were wounded, Palestinian and Israeli officials said. One of the Palestinians was moderately hurt, and the other 10 were slightly wounded, Palestinian doctors said. The Israeli army said the soldiers were also lightly wounded.
In a separate operation, dozens of troops entered the village of Kfar Kalil near Nablus where two wanted men were hiding, as an army bulldozer began to demolish a building, witnesses said.

The army said troops entered Kfar Kalil to search for wanted men, surrounding two houses. After an exchange of fire, two of the men inside surrendered. Another was shot, the military said, but his condition was not known.

Several Palestinian suspects have been killed recently in army operations in the West Bank to track them down.

On Wednesday evening, IDF troops evacuated a Palestinian mother and her two-year-old child from a house near the scene of the continuing exchange of gunfire between soldiers and Palestinians, after the boy had a severe asthma attack.

The governor of the Jenin district asked the Israeli civil authority to allow the transfer of the mother and the child. As they were taken from the house, soldiers held their fire while a Palestinian ambulance arrived to take the child to the hospital.

In a separate operation, dozens of troops surrounded a house in the village of Kfar Kadum near Nablus where two wanted men were hiding, as an army bulldozer began to demolish the building, witnesses said. The suspects inside and soldiers exchanged fire but no casualties were immediately reported. Another wanted man was arrested in the village.

The IDF did not comment on the Kfar Kadum operation.

Palestinian kids hold classes at checkpoint
Palestinian schoolteachers taught pupils in the road outside an Israel Defense Forces checkpoint in the West Bank city of Hebron on Wednesday to protest what they consider to be unnecessarily intrusive searches of the children on their way to school.

IDF soldiers search bags and make children lift their shirts before passing through the checkpoint on the way to school. The IDF says the high-tech checkpoint, which includes metal detectors and an X-ray scanner, is in an area where militant activity has been high.

About 200 children and 10 teachers began protesting at the checkpoint at 7 a.m. Some took part in the classes, and dozens of others tried to burst through the checkpoint, but soldiers shoved them bac.

No injuries were reported.

Pupils carried signs reading, "We have the right to learn," We have the right to pass to our school," and "We want to go to school." Others carried posters of the late Palestinian leader, Yasser Arafat.

On Tuesday, soldiers fired tear gas to disperse some 300 schoolchildren who protested at the checkpoint.

Palestinian Education Minister Mohammed Qawasmeh said pupils regularly arrive late for classes and are forced to stand outside in poor weather while waiting to clear the checkpoint's gates every morning.

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