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NewsOctober 23, 2001

JERUSALEM -- Standing firm on tough conditions, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said Monday his troops would not release their hold on six West Bank towns until the Palestinians turn over the militants who assassinated an Israeli Cabinet minister...

By Jason Keyser, The Associated Press

JERUSALEM -- Standing firm on tough conditions, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said Monday his troops would not release their hold on six West Bank towns until the Palestinians turn over the militants who assassinated an Israeli Cabinet minister.

In Jerusalem, thousands of Israelis demonstrators demanded that Sharon expel Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and bring down his Palestinian Authority.

Israeli tanks rumbled deeper into Palestinian towns, setting off street battles for a fifth day. In Tulkarem, a 65-year-old Palestinian man was killed, Palestinians said.

A leaflet issued in Bethlehem by Arafat's Fatah faction warned that if Israeli tanks did not withdraw from the biblical town, "Our bullets will fall like the rain on Gilo," a Jewish neighborhood built on disputed land on Jerusalem's southern fringe. Gunfire at Gilo set off the incursion early Friday.

In the Aida refugee camp outside Bethlehem, a heavy gunbattle erupted as tanks rolled in. In Ramallah, tanks fired shells as they moved forward, and were met by Palestinian fire. One Palestinian was wounded, doctors said. Overnight, Israeli army bulldozers destroyed the headquarters of Force 17, one of the Palestinian security services, in Ramallah. Israel said Force 17 members were suspected of having killed 10 Israelis in shooting attacks.

Speaking to party activists in Tel Aviv, Sharon repeated his main demand, already rejected by the Palestinians, that militants who gunned down Tourism Minister Rehavam Zeevi on Wednesday be handed over to Israel.

"We are not willing to make any compromises concerning ... a complete halt of terrorism, the dismantling of terror groups acting against us and the extradition of the killers of minister Zeevi and those who sent them," Sharon said.

The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine claimed responsibility for the assassination, saying it was revenge for Israel's killing of PFLP leader Mustafa Zibri on Aug. 27. Israel charged that Zibri was behind attacks against Israelis.

On Sunday, the Palestinian Authority banned the PFLP's military wing and Palestinian security forces said they detained 20 PFLP members.

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However, Palestinian Information Minister Yasser Abed Rabbo said Monday that those responsible for the Zeevi killing were Palestinians from Jerusalem, which is under Israeli control, and that four suspects were already in Israeli custody.

Israeli police officials refused to comment. Sharon claimed he had evidence the Palestinian police force commanded by Tawfik Tirawi helped the killers escape.

Sharon maintained there was no U.S. pressure to end the incursion. "They understand what we are doing," he said. "I didn't say they support it."

Israeli media have reported a deep rift between Israel and the United States over the incursion, reflecting U.S. concern that Mideast violence could sabotage efforts to bring moderate Arab states into its anti-terrorism coalition.

Thousands of Israelis filled Jerusalem's central square Monday evening, demanding tough action against the Palestinians -- and challenging Sharon's effort to navigate carefully among the conflicting pressures from his hard-line supporters, his moderate coalition partners and concerned Americans.

"Expel Arafat -- fight terror," read a banner behind the stage, where Zeevi's supporters criticized the government. Zeevi was on the fringe of the coalition, opposing any concessions to the Palestinians.

Benny Eilon, a member of Zeevi's party, declared the Palestinians should consider Jordan their state. "Never, never, never will there be a Palestinian state here," he told the cheering crowd. Palestinians want a state in all of the West Bank and Gaza.

In the Gaza Strip, Arafat met with U.N. Mideast envoy Terje Roed-Larsen, European Union special envoy Miguel Moratinos, Russian envoy Andrei Vdovin and U.S. Consul Ron Schlicher.

After the meeting, Roed-Larsen said they urged Arafat to rein in militants and enforce a cease-fire. "These steps should be matched with reciprocity by the Israelis ... including the immediate withdrawal of Israeli forces," he said.

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