16/08/2005
Gaza settlers clash with troops over Israeli pullout
Jewish settlers have been engaged in violent clashes with Israeli troops, as the pullout from the Gaza Strip continues.
According to reports, more than 50 people have been arrested in the largest settlement, as Jewish settlers from 21 settlements leave Gaza ahead of the deadline off 22:00 BST on Tuesday night.
At Neve Dekalim, the largest settlement in Gaza, Israeli police were forced to cut through locked gates to gain entry and attempt to restore order as hundreds of protestors gathered to oppose the pullout. During the protests, it was reported that settlers called the soldiers ‘Nazis’ and urged them to disobey their orders.
An Israeli officer is believed to have been injured in the clashes.
It is believed that as many as half of Gaza’s 8,500 settlers have already left the area and one settlement, Dugit, is understood to be completely empty, with all 79 residents already gone.
Forcible evictions will be begin if any settlers are still left in Gaza after 22:00 BST on Tuesday.
However, there are fears that extremists and hardliners are attempting to get into the area. According to reports, 500 extremists were arrested on Monday night, as they attempted to get into the settlements.
Israeli police were also forced to fire warning shots at a group of Palestinian children from the town of Khan Younis, who placed a flag from the militant group Hamas on the wall outside a Jewish settlement.
Around 3,000 Hamas supporters also marched through Khan Younis on Tuesday, to celebrate the Israeli pullout from the Gaza.
The Israeli pullout from occupied Palestinian territory in Gaza is the first of its kind to take place.
In a television address on Monday night, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said that Israel “could not hold on to Gaza forever” and that withdrawing from the region was “essential for Israel’s future”.
However, Palestinians have said that more pullouts from the West Bank area are needed, if peace is to be achieved.
(KMcA/SP)
According to reports, more than 50 people have been arrested in the largest settlement, as Jewish settlers from 21 settlements leave Gaza ahead of the deadline off 22:00 BST on Tuesday night.
At Neve Dekalim, the largest settlement in Gaza, Israeli police were forced to cut through locked gates to gain entry and attempt to restore order as hundreds of protestors gathered to oppose the pullout. During the protests, it was reported that settlers called the soldiers ‘Nazis’ and urged them to disobey their orders.
An Israeli officer is believed to have been injured in the clashes.
It is believed that as many as half of Gaza’s 8,500 settlers have already left the area and one settlement, Dugit, is understood to be completely empty, with all 79 residents already gone.
Forcible evictions will be begin if any settlers are still left in Gaza after 22:00 BST on Tuesday.
However, there are fears that extremists and hardliners are attempting to get into the area. According to reports, 500 extremists were arrested on Monday night, as they attempted to get into the settlements.
Israeli police were also forced to fire warning shots at a group of Palestinian children from the town of Khan Younis, who placed a flag from the militant group Hamas on the wall outside a Jewish settlement.
Around 3,000 Hamas supporters also marched through Khan Younis on Tuesday, to celebrate the Israeli pullout from the Gaza.
The Israeli pullout from occupied Palestinian territory in Gaza is the first of its kind to take place.
In a television address on Monday night, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said that Israel “could not hold on to Gaza forever” and that withdrawing from the region was “essential for Israel’s future”.
However, Palestinians have said that more pullouts from the West Bank area are needed, if peace is to be achieved.
(KMcA/SP)
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18 August 2005
Troops remove Gaza demonstrators
The Jewish settlements of Kfar Darom and Neve Dekalim in the Gaza Strip have become the focus of resistance to Ariel Sharon's pullout plan. Hundreds of opponents of the Gaza pullout plan barricaded themselves in the settlements' synagogues and on rooftops as troops moved in to evict the settlers.
Troops remove Gaza demonstrators
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15 April 2004
Blair welcomes 'comprehensive' Israeli strategy
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12 June 2003
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28 October 2004
Israel's Gaza pull out a 'real opportunity for progress'
The Israeli disengagement from Gaza will provide a "real opportunity for progress", according to the Foreign Secretary. Last night's Knesset vote, carried by 67-45, saw a clear majority in favour of the Israeli leader's initiative to withdraw troops and settlers from Gaza and parts of the northern West Bank.
Israel's Gaza pull out a 'real opportunity for progress'
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