Post by Salem6 on Jun 20, 2007 9:30:42 GMT
Israel says it will allow a number of Palestinians who have been trying to flee the Gaza Strip to enter Israel.
Conditions inside the concrete tunnel are said to be filthy
The "humanitarian cases" are among hundreds of Palestinians who have been stranded at the Erez border crossing for days - some in a desperate state.
They have been trying to flee Gaza after it was taken last week by Hamas militants from their rivals Fatah.
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas is due to explain his sacking of the Hamas cabinet last Thursday.
Mr Abbas is addressing a meeting of the central committee of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) in the West Bank city of Ramallah on Wednesday.
His new emergency government that excludes Hamas has received strong international backing - the US and the EU have lifted a financial and diplomatic embargo imposed after Hamas won elections and came to power 18 months ago.
Last week's factional fighting left more than 100 people dead.
First clashes
Reports say there are up to 600 Gazans sheltering inside a long dusty concrete tunnel on the south side of the crossing.
There are no facilities to sustain life, and many people have been left lying there on the bare concrete amid their own filth.
Israel's Physicians for Human Rights sent a petition to the Supreme Court to force the authorities to offer immediate medical treatment to those needing it.
And Defence Minister Ehud Barak has now instructed officials to admit those needing urgent care.
No figures have been given on how many will be admitted and no guidelines on what criteria will be used.
Among the first being allowed in shortly after Mr Barak's order was a 17-year-old boy with leukaemia, the Associated Press news agency quoted Shadi Yassin, a military liaison official, as saying.
Most people fleeing have been denied entry by Israel, which controls the crossing, on security grounds.
About 100 are believed to be members of pro-Fatah security forces - they fear Hamas militants, despite an amnesty issued by Hamas after the takeover.
An Israeli spokesman said on Wednesday that they should return home.
"There is no obstacle to their returning home, and the fact of the matter is that most of them have already done so. Hamas also declared that it had not intention of harming them and released most of the detainees," Peter Lerner, told Israel army radio.
In the first clashes in Gaza since Hamas took over, Israeli troops killed a member of Hamas - and a militant from the Popular Resistance Committees - early on Wednesday.
An Israeli soldier was also wounded in an exchange of fire with militants during the brief Israeli incursion near the Kissufim border crossing in central Gaza.
Two more Palestinians were killed in a clash at a village near the West Bank town of Jenin - an Islamic Jihad commander and a member of a Fatah-affiliated group had been killed, Israel and Palestinian witnesses said.
news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/6220904.stm