Battle erupts after cease-fire

AP PHOTO

Israeli medics rush a wounded settler into a Tel Aviv hospital yesterday. Israeli combat helicopters traded heavy fire with Palestinian gunmen while trying to rescue Jewish settlers.

JERUSALEM (AP) - Israeli combat helicopters, attempting to rescue Jewish settlers trapped on a rocky West Bank hillside, traded heavy fire with Palestinian gunmen in a five-hour shootout yesterday. Two people died and at least 18 were wounded.

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak declared it a "gross violation" of a truce announced two days earlier.

Both the Palestinians and the Israelis said the other side fired first.

The settlers said Palestinian gunmen started the battle, but the Palestinians claimed the settlers fired first on unarmed olive pickers.

The firefight amid the barren rocks of Mount Ebal, overlooking the West Bank town of Nablus, came on the eve of today's deadline imposed by both sides for ending three weeks of violence that has left more than 100 dead, the vast majority Palestinians.

The dead were a Palestinian and an Israeli settler, Rabbi Binyamin Erling, head of a rabbinical college in the settlement of Eilon Moreh. He bled to death awaiting rescue.

The wounded included 15 Palestinians and at least three Israelis, according to Palestinian doctors and Israeli security officials.

"This is a very grave incident and a gross violation by the Palestinian Authority," Barak said in a statement issued after the battle ended and the settlers were evacuated.

The shootout appeared to be a serious threat to the deal announced Tuesday at a Mideast summit in Egypt, where President Clinton read a statement saying that both sides would work to stop the violence.

Trouble broke out when about 40 Jewish settlers tried to travel to the hillside to observe Joseph's Tomb, a holy site in Nablus recently ransacked by a Palestinian mob.

Despite a military ban on tours, the settlers received army permission for their excursion, said Maj.

Gen. Yitzhak Eitan, the regional commander. He called it a "grave error" by the army and said it would be investigated.

The settlers came under fire from a Palestinian refugee camp, and Israeli helicopter gunships soon joined the fray in an attempt to protect some 40 settlers, including women and children, and evacuate the wounded, according to Israelis.

Two helicopters hovered, unleashing machine-gun fire on Palestinians darting for cover behind the huge stones on a mountain nicknamed the "accursed mountain" for its stark landscape. Palestinians returned antiaircraft fire, a first in the four-week conflict.

The settlers scattered across the hillside, making it difficult for the Israeli forces to reach all of those trapped. Several of the wounded Israelis could not be evacuated immediately due to the heavy Palestinian fire.

Both Israeli television stations broadcast nonstop coverage of the gunfight, running footage caught at its outbreak repeatedly and maintaining phone contact with the settlers. One settler, pinned down by the gunfire, was interviewed on his cellular telephone by Israel's Channel 2 TV.

"Under fire for five hours straight," said Elazar Mizrahi, the staccato of automatic fire audible in the background. "There are still gunshots. Hiding. Others 30 meters (yards) from me. We came to tour the area. I'm hiding behind a rock. I can't leave here."

The battle died out after dark, while Israel moved tanks and armored personnel carriers to the outskirts of Nablus. Tanks had been moved away just a day earlier in an effort to reduce tensions.

Nablus has remained extremely tense despite the military's withdrawal from the holy site. The settlers have vowed to return to the tomb, though it is in the middle of the restive Palestinian city.

After the truce was announced in Egypt, the two sides agreed Wednesday to wait 48 hours, until around midday Friday, to determine whether it was working.



Originally on page 3A in the 10-20-2000 issue of the Daily.

 

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