By Yusri Mohamed
ISMAILIA, Egypt (Reuters) - Egypt moved 5,000 more security forces near
the Gaza Strip border on Saturday after an Israeli report said Israel
may bomb tunnels used for smuggling weapons into Palestinian
territories, an Egyptian official said.
"They requested reinforcements after the Israeli report and also citing
fears of Palestinian militants breaching the border wall between the
Gaza Strip and Egypt," the official told Reuters in Cairo.
The 5,000 Egyptians were members of the police's central security
force. They joined about 750 border guards already deployed along the
area known as the Philadelphi Corridor, fearing the possible
operation's impact on civilians living on the Egyptian side of the
border.
The Israeli daily newspaper Maariv reported on Friday that
precision-guided weapons would be used to penetrate deep underground in
the hope of destroying the tunnel network that the Jewish state says
riddles the area, which is 14 km (8.6 miles) long and approximately 100
metres (330 feet) wide.
The decision to use "smart" bombs may be a substitute to reoccupying
the entire region, the newspaper said. Israel says it has been unable
to control weapons smuggling into Gaza since it withdrew its forces
from the coastal strip last year.
"We are following the situation with extreme concern and we have not
received any warnings from the Israeli side about this operation," one
Egyptian official told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The Israeli army declined to comment on the report.
An Israeli military source said later on Saturday: "Anything that will
take place along the Philadelphi Corridor will be reported to the
Egyptian authorities in advance."
A Palestinian security official in Gaza denied reports of further
Egyptian forces being deployed along the border line itself.
The official said after consultations with Egyptian counterparts, the
number of border police remained at 750.
Israel started to target underground passages in the area after
Palestinian militants tunnelled into Israel and captured one of its
soldiers in a raid on June 25. The operation also sparked an expanded
Israeli military offensive that killed more than 250 Palestinians,
about half of them civilians.
Maariv reported the air force was given the green light to drop bombs
after a similar campaign successfully destroyed tunnels along the
northern Gaza border with Israel.
Egyptian security and border officials said the possible Israeli
operation could threaten around 20,000 civilians who live close to the
border.
"There are schools, banks, markets and residential buildings close to
the border with Gaza, which makes the use of such bombs more
dangerous," one official said.
Several Egyptian civilians were killed and many wounded from
cross-border bomb shrapnel during Israeli attacks on the Palestinian
border town of Rafah before the withdrawal from the Gaza Strip.
Egyptian police recently seized 195 crates of automatic weapons and
ammunition meant to be smuggled across the border and the Israeli army
said its troops discovered 15 tunnels along the border during the past
week.
Israel estimates that tons of munitions, including advanced
shoulder-fire missiles, have been smuggled into Gaza through the
tunnels, though they have presented scarce evidence that Gaza militants
use such weaponry.
Original
Source
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