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Christian Action Network
Israel's network of roadblocks will remain in
place across the West Bank, the defense minister said Tuesday,
sparking an outcry from Palestinians who say they cannot rebuild
their economy until people and goods move freely.
Defense Minister Ehud Barak's comments soured an already tense
atmosphere between Israel and the Palestinians just days before
President Bush's first visit to the region as U.S. president.
Israeli construction in east Jerusalem and the West Bank and
violence between Israelis and Palestinians — and among Palestinians
themselves — threaten to overwhelm Bush's peace efforts.
In a newspaper interview ahead of the visit, Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert said for their own good, Israelis must consider giving
up much of the West Bank and part of Jerusalem to the Palestinians.
Jan. 1 is the day Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah
movement celebrates its anniversary, but in Gaza, Hamas rulers
banned fireworks and marches — setting off clashes that killed eight
people and wounded more than 60. It was the worst outbreak of
infighting since Nov. 11, when Hamas forces opened fire at a huge
Fatah rally, killing eight.
The eight dead Tuesday included three Hamas and three Fatah
supporters, officials said. Also killed were an elderly man caught
in a crossfire in northern Gaza and a 14-year-old Hamas supporter
shot in the southern town of Khan Younis after he left a mosque,
relatives said.
By nightfall Tuesday, the internal fighting had died down, but then
a Hamas militant was killed in an Israeli attack in Gaza,
Palestinians said. The Israeli military said it targeted armed
Palestinians.
Late Tuesday, Israeli security released a statement saying two
gunmen who killed two Israeli hikers in the West Bank on Friday were
Fatah activists, a disclosure that could further complicate peace
moves. Abbas is the local leader of Fatah. The statement said the
two surrendered to Palestinian police to avoid arrest by Israel.
Removing roadblocks is a constant Palestinian demand, and Israel has
pledged several times to take down some of the dozens of checkpoints
that have choked economic and social life in the West Bank. Israel
erected the roadblocks after the Palestinian uprising erupted in
2000, when attackers crossed into Israel.
On Tuesday, however, Barak said the roadblocks have proven effective
against Palestinian attacks.
"There is no chance of effectively fighting terror without practical
daily control in the field, and the roadblocks will stay," Barak
said.
Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said Barak's comments were "very
unfortunate."
"I don't think we can do anything about the economy of improvement
of life or revival of institution-building" as long as the
roadblocks remain, Erekat said.
Barak has ordered the removal of two dozen dirt embankments and two
of the 16 major West Bank checkpoints since he became defense
minister in June, but the Palestinians say that has not made a
significant change.
Olmert called for Israeli concessions.
Even Israel's closest international allies want it to pull back in
the West Bank and share Jerusalem, Olmert said in an interview
published Tuesday.
When speaking of the future, "the world that is friendly to Israel
... speaks of Israel in terms of the '67 borders. It speaks of the
division of Jerusalem," Olmert told the English-language Israeli
daily The Jerusalem Post.
Israel captured the West Bank, east Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip in
the 1967 Mideast war. Palestinians want those territories for an
independent state, with east Jerusalem as its capital.
Olmert said Israel had to withdraw from Palestinian territory to
preserve itself as a democracy and as a predominantly Jewish state.
"What will be if we don't want to separate?" Olmert said. "Will we
live eternally in a confused reality where 50 percent of the
population or more are residents but not equal citizens who have the
right to vote like us?"
About 5.4 million Jews live in Israel alongside 1.4 million Israeli
Arabs. Another 3.9 million Palestinians live in the West Bank and
Gaza Strip. Israel pulled out of Gaza in 2005.
Associated Press