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Israeli airstrike kills 2 militants accused in reporter’s kidnapping

Palestinians gathered around a car destroyed in a Gaza street yesterday during an Israeli airstrike. Two people were killed and three people wounded in the strike. Palestinians gathered around a car destroyed in a Gaza street yesterday during an Israeli airstrike. Two people were killed and three people wounded in the strike. (Hatem Moussa/ Associated Press)
By Ibrahim Barzak
Associated Press / November 18, 2010

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GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — An Israeli airstrike ripped through a car in Gaza City yesterday, killing two militants accused of helping kidnap a British Broadcasting Corp. journalist in March 2007, officials said.

The men, Islam and Mohammed Yasin, are related and belonged to the Army of Islam, said a Gaza official who declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter. The shadowy extremist Muslim group draws inspiration from Al Qaeda, though it is not believed to have operational links.

The airstrike left the car in flames and also wounded three people, said Hamas medical official Adham Abu Salmia.

Israel has killed dozens of wanted Palestinian militants — and a number of bystanders — in airstrikes over the years. But Israel has greatly scaled back its operations since early 2009.

BBC reporter Alan Johnston was released about four months after his abduction in Gaza.

The Army of Islam was also involved in the capture of Israeli soldier Gilad Schalit in 2006. Schalit remains a captive.

An Israeli military spokesman said Islam Yasin was involved in plans to kidnap Israelis in the Egyptian Sinai. The spokesman, who requested anonymity in line with military rules, said Yasin worked under another Army of Islam operative killed in a Nov. 3 Israeli strike. Hamas controls the Gaza Strip, while the rival Palestinian Authority governs the West Bank.

The violence yesterday took place as Israel and the United States remained in a standoff over the terms of a Washington-proposed settlement construction moratorium in the West Bank.

The United States hopes that by halting Israeli settlement construction, it can bring the West Bank government back to peace talks. Negotiations broke down in late September, just weeks after they were launched, with the expiration of an earlier Israeli settlement slowdown.

The United States wants Israel to halt settlement construction for an additional 90 days. In exchange, it has offered key military and diplomatic incentives to Israel.

But Israel is seeking written assurances that it will not be required to extend the freeze further, and that East Jerusalem, the section of the city claimed by the Palestinians, not be subject to building restrictions.

An Israeli official said yesterday that those terms have not been finalized.

US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton declined to comment yesterday on the demand for a written guarantee, saying only that efforts to revive the peace talks were continuing.

“We are working intensively to create the conditions for the resumption of negotiations that can lead to a two-state solution and a comprehensive peace,’’ Clinton said.

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