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Five nabbed in U.S. convoy bombing

Gaza City -
Palestinian police arrested five members of a militant group early
Thursday in connection with a deadly attack on a U.S. diplomatic
convoy, security officials said. Witnesses said a gunfight erupted
during the raid.
The five are members of the Popular
Resistance Committees, a group that consists largely of former
Palestinian security officials and disgruntled members of Yasser
Arafat's Fatah movement, the security officials said.
The five were arrested in the
Jebaliya refugee camp, which is near the site of Wednesday's attack.
The bombing killed three American security guards working for the U.S.
Embassy in Tel Aviv.
One of those arrested was identified
as Ahmed Saker, 25.
Palestinian witnesses said that when
Palestinian police came to Block 8 of Jebaliya to make arrests, a gun
fight erupted. There were no reports of injuries.
Palestinian militant groups,
including Hamas and Islamic Jihad, have been quick to distance
themselves from the attack, and the Popular Resistance Committees
issued a statement saying it was not involved.
The group was formed at the end of
2000, three months after the outbreak of Israeli-Palestinian fighting.
It consists of dozens of armed men, mostly Fatah breakaways or former
members of the security forces. Other factions, including Hamas and
Islamic Jihad, are also represented.
The group does not have a political
ideology, but believes the use of force is the only way to end Israeli
occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. In the past three years of
fighting, the group has blown up three Israeli Merkava tanks with
powerful remote-controlled bombs — the same method used in Wednesday's
attack.
The group has also fired mortars at
Israeli settlements in Gaza and border communities.
After Palestinian militants declared
a unilateral cease-fire on June 29, the Popular Resistance Committee
split into two wings, the General Command and the Jenin Brigades. The
former hinted it was ready to halt attacks temporarily, while the
latter insisted it would not observe a truce. --
Associated Press
Brudirect.com
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