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Abbas adds terrorist fugitives to security forces


Jerusalem Post, April 10, 2005.



The process of recruiting hundreds of Fatah gunmen to the Palestinian Authority security forces began Saturday as PA Chairman Mahmoud Abbas ordered the Finance Ministry to start paying them salaries.

"President Abbas has issued an order to treat the wanted gunmen like their colleagues in the security forces and to pay them monthly salaries," a top PA official told The Jerusalem Post. "As of today, these men belong to the security forces."

Asked if the PA was planning to confiscate the gunmen's weapons, the official said: "As members of the security forces, they will need to carry guns. They will carry weapons that have been licensed by the Interior Ministry."

Former minister Abdel Fattah Hamayel, who has been acting as a liaison between the PA leadership and the gunmen, said there were about 500 fugitives in the West Bank and another 27 in the Gaza Strip. He said most of the gunmen, who are wanted by Israel for their involvement in terror attacks, had agreed to join the PA security forces and respect the law.

At the executive committee meeting, Abbas said the plight of the wanted gunmen had been at the top of his list of priorities. "Our sons who are on the run have won special attention from the Palestinian leadership," he said. "We want to achieve security for them and their families. We have reached an agreement in principle with Israel regarding the safety of these men."

The committee expressed appreciation for Abbas's efforts and called on the Fatah gunmen to abide by the rule of law. It said the gunmen should refrain from engaging in "negative activities" so as not to provide Israel with an excuse to avoid fulfilling its commitments in line with the Sharm e-Sheikh understandings.

Most of the gunmen belong to Fatah's armed wing, the Aksa Martyrs Brigades. Some of them had previously served as policemen, but defected shortly after the beginning of the intifada to join the terrorist group.

Abbas has come under heavy pressure to crack down on the group because of its responsibility for lawlessness and anarchy. Two weeks ago, dozens of Fatah gunmen went on the rampage in Ramallah, destroying several restaurants and shops before shooting at Abbas's offices. The attackers were protesting against Abbas's decision to kick them out of the Mukata.




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