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Sprintcyclist
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gavin - bbbwwwarrrkkk bbwwwwwwwwaaaaarrrrrkkkkkkkk bbbbbbwwwwwwaaaaarrrrkkkkk
That's the noise a chicken makes.
yes skeptic, I do realise that. I also realise that that is a fallacy you hint at. I also realise you have not answered my questions. Neither had gavin. Suppose gavin lives in NSW, I am in QLD. We vote in a party whose "policy" is to run off or murder the NSW people from NSW. This is credible. We have been doing this for generations. In gavins idea, NSW should accept the party, as it was elected. In my idea, of course NSW should not recognise them. In addition neither should Victoria. The party in QLD will not stop at NSW, they are extremists. Skeptic - I have two questions for you. Do you like to have your head on your shoulders ? Are you your brothers keeper or not ? feel free to answer the above questions skeptic
here are the people you support
Fatah's backers fear life in Gaza
Ed O'Loughlin Herald Correspondent in Gaza June 20, 2007
THE "sleeve" has long been an unlovely fact of life at the Erez crossing, a kilometre-long cement corridor designed to keep terrorists clear of the Israeli-Gaza border gate.
Known as "the tunnel" among aid workers, United Nations staff and foreign journalists, it was also a concrete manifestation of day to day co-operation between the Israeli Army and the Fatah-controlled Palestinian Authority.
Nobody could approach the Israeli border complex without first being cleared by the Palestinian police at the other end, who co-ordinated movements with their Israeli counterparts.
But that was all last week. Yesterday the only Palestinian Authority security men still visible at Erez were a couple of hundred unarmed Fatah fugitives desperate to flee into Israel. They had camped for four days at the border gate. Behind them, Bedouin looters were dismantling the tunnel, stripping roofing and digging up pipes and wiring.
"If we went back to Gaza, Hamas would execute us," said a 30-year-old man who gave his name as Abu Faras. "We don't have the same ideology as them and they are shooting everybody who has different beliefs."
Abu Faras lay on the floor of the tunnel among a group of injured men, his leg crudely bandaged to staunch bleeding from a gunshot wound.
Along with a dozen others, he was injured on Monday night when gunmen from a breakaway Fatah faction called the Popular Resistance Committees, now allied with Hamas, entered the tunnel and sprayed bullets along it. At least one person was killed.
The faction claimed it was attacking the Israeli soldiers who were posted at the end of the sleeve to stop the fugitive Fatah men from breaking through to Israel. The Fatah men said they were the targets, and that Hamas was responsible.
The day before troops had fired tear gas and concussion grenades to hold back a stampede: yesterday, buses were being assembled on the Israeli side of the border, reportedly waiting for a possible order to ferry the fugitives through Israeli territory to Fatah-controlled areas of the West Bank.
Further away from the gate were clustered the civilians - women with children, the sick and the old - hoping for a chance to leave once the Fatah men were taken care of.
Israel had already allowed scores of Fatah leaders to flee last week while fighting was still under way. The top commanders, including the Fatah security boss Mohammed Dahlan, left the strip weeks ago.
Mariam Yahi, a 63 year-old cancer patient, was on her way to Tel Aviv for chemotherapy last week when the border was closed. "Two days ago I was OK, but now my situation is getting worse," she said.
"I'm feeling sicker, especially since the Israelis fired tear gas when they [the Fatah fugitives] tried to rush across the border."
The first sign of Gaza's new master, the Islamic fundamentalist Hamas movement, came a kilometre from the border, where a masked but unarmed commander was supervising a checkpoint with one armed subordinate.
"This is as close as we can go," said the commander, who called himself Abu Hassan. "If we went any closer that tank there would shoot at us" - and he pointed to an Israeli tank a few hundred meters inside Gaza territory, its barrel trained on the checkpoint.
He said the fugitives had nothing to fear from Hamas now. "They are no more than kids and jobless men who just want to get out. Everybody knows that Hamas has already freed even the most wanted men it captured."
But as long as murders are elected, it is ok ????????????
bwark bwark bwark bwark
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