... THE UNIVERSITY DARY KANSAN THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2008 NSAN 2008 NEWS 5A THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20. 2008 . D PHOTO main INTERNATIONAL Israel ignores UN pleas, continues Gaza blockade A Jewish settler walks up the stairs in a disrupted building in the West Bank town of Hebron. A court-ordered expired Wednesday for Jewish settlers to leave a four-story building in the volatile West Bank city of Hebron. The settlers ignored the ruling, which also said they must be excused within 30 days if they don't leave voluntarily. ASSOCIATED PRESS ASSOCIATED PRESS ASSOCIATED PRESS JERUSALEM — Israel stood fast Wednesday by its decision to clamp shut cargo crossings at the Gaza Strip, brushing off pleas to ease the blockade from United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon. Israel sealed the passages two weeks ago after a 5-month-old truce between Israel and Gaza militants started unraveling in an effort to halt rocket and mortar fire at Israeli border towns. The crossings, a main source of imports to Gaza, have been cracked open occasionally to allow in fuel and vital supplies. But the closures have drastically reduced the amount of goods entering the already impoverished seaside territory of 1.4 million people, causing shortages of many basic goods. On Tuesday, Ban called Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert "to express his deep concern over the consequences of the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Gaza," the U.N. said in a statement. "He strongly urged the prime minister to facilitate the freer movement of urgently needed humanitarian supplies and of concerned United Nations personnel into Gaza," the statement said. Olmert said Israel was not to blame for the deterioration of conditions in Gaza, according to the prime minister's office. "Gazans have only Hamas' regime of terror to blame," he said. Hamas, an Islamic militant group committed to Israels destruction, has ruled Gaza since violently overrunning the territory in June 2007. Israel's Gaza blockade has led to frequent blackouts throughout Gaza and resulted in shortages of food, supplies and even cash. Gaza's largest flour mill halted operations Wednesday, saying it had run out of wheat, and the United Nations said it was being forced to suspend cash grants to 98,000 of Gaza's poorest people because of a shortage of Israeli currency. The Israeli closure also prompted major international media organizations, including The Associated Press, BBC, Reuters and the New York Times, to send a rare protest letter to the prime minister, requesting that foreign journalists be allowed into Gaza. Israel has barred reporters from entering the area for the past two weeks. There was no immediate comment from Olmert's office. Defense Minister Ehud Barak told Army Radio on Wednesday that "there has to be quiet for the crossings to open." At nightfall Wednesday, Palestinians reported a large explosion east of Gaza City. Hamas officials said the blast was caused by a shell, but it was not clear if it was an Israeli or Palestinian device. No one was hurt. Often homemade rockets and mortars fired by Palestinians at Israel fall short and explode in Gaza. Israel and Hamas have been observing a truce since June. The cease-fire has largely held until Israeli troops entered Gaza early this month to destroy a tunnel they said militants had dug to attack Israel. At least 17 militants have been killed since, and militants have fired about 150 rockets and mortars at Israel, by the military's count. Both Israeli and Hamas officials have said they hope to restore the calm, though Barak has said the military is ready for a large-scale operation if necessary. The Hamas prime minister in Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh, met with leaders of other Palestinian factions Wednesday. He said they support maintaining the truce "as long as the occupation (Israel) commits to it." Before the truce was reached, militants pelted Israel with near-daily rocket attacks, provoking sometimes harsh military retaliation that killed hundreds of Palestinians, including many civilians. U. S. President-elect Barack Obama called Abbas on Tuesday to tell him he would spare no effort to facilitate a peace agreement between Israel and the Palestinians, Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said Wednesday. story building in the volatile city of Hebron. The settlers ignored the ruling, which also said they must be evicted within 30 days if they don't leave voluntarily. Barak said the government would comply with the court order, but added defense officials would first try to persuade the settlers to leave. About 500 of the most extreme Israeli settlers live in Hebron in heavily guarded enclaves among 170,000 Palestinians. If Israeli security forces evict them from the building, violent clashes are likely. Media reports Wednesday said about 600 people have gathered around the building to prevent its evacuation. Settlers moved in early last year after claiming they bought the building from a Palestinian. The Palestinian denies the claim, and Israeli authorities have not recognized the sale as legal. INTERNATIONAL Al-Qaida leader insults Obama with racial slur in Web video ASSOCIATED PRESS In a frame from a video provided by IntelCenter, posted on the Internet on April 13, 2006, al-Qaida's deputy leader Ayman al-Zawarira praises insurgents in Iraq. Al-Zawarira insulted Barack Obama in the terror group's first reaction to his election, calling him a demeaning racial term implying that the president-elect is a black American who does the bidding of whites. Al-Zawarira said in a message on Wednesday that Obama is "the direct opposite of honorable black Americans" like Malcolm X, the 1960s African-American civil rights leader. ASSOCIATED PRESS CAIRO, Egypt — Al-Qaida's No. 2 slurred Barack Obama with a demeaning racial term for a black American who does the bidding of whites in a new Web message Wednesday intended to dent the president-elect's popularity among Arabs and Muslims and claim he will not change U.S. policy. Ayman al-Zawahri's speech was al-Qaida's first reaction to Obama's election victory — and it suggested the terror network is worried the new American leader could underline its rallying cry that the United States is an enemy oppressor. Al-Zawahri dug into U.S. racial history to try to directly knock down that belief and argue Obama will be no more sympathetic than white leaders to what the al-Qaida leader called "the oppressed" of the world. many in the Middle East who hope he will end what they see as American aggression against Muslims and Arabs under President George W. Bush. Some have his race and Muslim family connections could make him more understanding of the developing world's concerns. He said Obama was the "direct opposite of honorable black Americans" like Malcolm X, the 1960s Muslim African-American rights leader, who is known among Obama has been welcomed by fields. Malcolm X used the term to criticize black leaders he accused of not standing up to whites and discrimination. $12.99 COUCH POTATO "CHOOSE I" EX-LARGE I-ITEM PIZZI EX-LARGE POKYE STIX PEPPERONE ROLLS CAMPUS SPECIAL Al-Zawahri addressed "all the world's weak and oppressed," and warned them: "America has put on a new face, but its heart full of hate, mind drowning in greed and spirit which spreads evil, murder, repression and despotism continue to be the same as always." 2 FOR $19.99 2 FOR $27.99 some in the Arab world and seen as a symbol of anti-imperialism. -ITEM PIZZA OR PONKEY PIZZA MEDIUM $7.99 LARGE $8.99 EX-LARGE $9.99 MASSIVE 20" $13.99 SMALL $6.99 Al-Zawahri also called Obama — along with secretaries of state Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice — "house Negroes." 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