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Palestinian intel officer’s 3 kids gunned down

Unprecedented attack in crowded Gaza street on family of Fatah loyalist

Mohammed Salem / Reuters
Palestinian security officers stand watch over the vehicle in which three sons of a Palestinian intelligence chief loyal to President Mahmoud Abbas were shot and killed in Gaza on Sunday.
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updated 11:22 a.m. ET Dec. 11, 2006

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - Three young children of a senior Palestinian intelligence officer were killed Monday in a drive-by shooting in a street crowded with schoolchildren, an unprecedented attack that could ignite widespread factional fighting.

Gunmen pumped dozens of bullets into a car carrying the children of intelligence officer Baha Balousheh, a loyalist of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah movement. A decade ago, Balousheh was a lead interrogator in a crackdown on the now-ruling Islamic militant Hamas movement.

Three of Balousheh’s children, ranging in age from six to 10, were killed, along with an adult, hospital officials said. Four more people were wounded in the attack in Palestine Street, lined with nine schools. Baha Balousheh was not in the area.

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The car was riddled with at least 30 bullets. Its seats, schoolbags and a small plastic bag with a sandwich in it were spattered with blood.

Dozens of Fatah supporters tried to close the street, shouting: “God help us take revenge against the killers.”

Terrified children
As the shots rang out, children dropped to the ground or fled screaming.

“I was walking with my young brother, Wael, who is 9, and we just crossed the street in order to take him to the school when shooting took place,” said 12-year-old Fadwa Nabulsi, still shaken by the bloody scene.

“We saw fire coming from one car. We started screaming and children started running. I was crying, and I lost Wael for about half an hour. Then I found him hiding in a felafel shop. I’m trying to find my father to take us back home,” she said.

Anxious scene
Dozens of Palestinian police in the area were trying to calm the children and help them locate their parents. Hundreds of anxious parents rushed to Gaza City’s Shifa Hospital to get word on their children.

Gaza has been plagued by factional violence in the past, with dozens killed and hundreds wounded. However, Monday’s attack targeting children was unprecedented, and was likely to trigger widespread confrontations at a time when the lines between Hamas and Fatah have hardened.

Earlier this month, Abbas announced that talks on forming a unity government between Hamas and Fatah have broken down. Earlier this week, he raised the possibility of calling early elections, drawing angry protests by Hamas which said he does not have the authority to dissolve the Hamas-dominated parliament.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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