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Friday, 19 April. 2024
 
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Rice Sympathizes with Israeli Settlers, But Says: ‘It Cannot Be Gaza Only’

The Palestinian National Authority (PNA) and Israel condemned as an act of “Jewish terror” the shooting spree by a Jewish settler that claimed the lives of four Palestinian workers, including two brothers, on Wednesday, a few hours after Israel’s Prime Minister Ariel Sharon pledged to develop settlement activity in the West Bank.

Sharon has repeatedly argued that Israel’s exit from the Gaza Strip will enable it to expand other Israeli settlements in the West Bank despite its “official” commitment to the Quartet-drafted and UN-adopted “roadmap” peace plan, which stipulates a freeze on such activity.

“Settlement activity has allowed the state of Israel to achieve important ends. There are settlement blocs that will remain under our control,” he pledged.

“Settlement is a serious program that will continue and develop,” Sharon said, expressing full of admiration for the settlers' achievements.

“We all had a dream, I had a dream, to hold on to all the areas but many things have passed. We must not have the feeling that everything they had done has been in vain,” he added.

Israel seemed determined to stick to Sharon’s statements last week that he will not negotiate Jerusalem, will cling to major Israeli colonies in the West Bank and will not allow Palestinian refugees to return to their homeland in Israel.

The illegal Jewish settlement blocs of Maale Adumim, Gush Etzion and Efrat near Jerusalem, Ariel together with two more colonies in the northern West Bank, as well as those in the Jordan Valley “will remain under Israeli control,” Israeli “Defense” Minister Shaul Mofaz told army radio on Monday.

“The settlement blocs in Judea and Samaria (the West Bank) and the Jordan valley will remain under Israeli control,” Mofaz said.

The number of illegal Jewish settlers in the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT) in 2004 reached 440,415, of which 432,275 live in Israeli colonies in the West Bank, including Jerusalem, and 8,140 in the Gaza Strip, the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS) reported last week (Sunday).

The settlers have always been the major obstacle to peace between the Palestinian and Israeli peoples.

Jewish Settlers’ Terror

“Before the disengagement from the Gaza Strip, there were warnings of violence and Palestinian terror that would provoke a harsh Israeli response and halt the evacuation. Wednesday, it appeared that the violence and terror now find their source in Israeli right-wing extremists. Soldier Eden Natan Zada has been joined by another Israeli murderer, Asher Weissgan, 38, a settler who sought to strengthen the evacuated settlers, but weakens them and casts a blight on their entire movement,” Ze’ev Schiff wrote in Haaretz on Thursday.

Schiff was commenting on the latest settlers’ outrage.

A Jewish settler killed four Palestinian workers including two brothers in a shooting rampage that also seriously wounded three others before being arrested in the Israeli Shilo colony that was built on the occupied Palestinian lands of the villages of Turmus A’yya, Qaryoot and Sinjil, north of Ramallah.

The victims were identified as brothers Bassam, 40, and Osama Mousa Ahmad Tawafsheh, 30, from the Palestinian village of Sinjel, Mohammad Ali Mansour, 49, from the village of Kufr Qallil, and Khalil Mohammad Salejh Walwil, 35 the northern West Bank town of Qalqilya.

The four deaths brought to more than 3,894 the overall Palestinian death toll since the outbreak of the Al Aqsa Intifada on September 28, 2000.

According to Israel Radio, the Jewish terrorist, identified as Asher Weisgan, 40, is from the settlement of “Shvut Rahel,” north of the West Bank city of Ramallah.

Israel’s Channel 1 said Weisgan admitted to the killings and said he had committed the attack in an attempt to thwart disengagement.

Israeli police said the terrorist was a driver who had taken Palestinian workers to jobs in Shiloh. Once there, he snatched a security guard's gun and turned it on his passengers. Police later arrested him.

Weisgan, who worked for Ortal Transports as a driver for Palestinian industrial zone workers, opened fire on his own passengers.

The security guard who was working at the main gate of the site, said that Weisgan, a father of two, asked him for water, and that when he tried to oblige, Weisgan threatened him with a knife and demanded his gun.

Weisgan then reportedly shot and killed two Palestinians who sat in his vehicle, then advanced to the industrial area, where he shot an additional three Palestinians, killing one and wounding two - one seriously and one moderately.

This is the second attack against Palestinians by Jewish terrorists in less than two weeks.

On August 4, 2005, a settler-soldier opened fire onboard a bus heading to the Israeli Palestinian town of Shafa-Amr, killing four Israeli Arab citizens and injuring at least 15 others.

The victims of the terrorist attack were identified as two sisters, Hazar 23, and Deena Torkey, 21, Nader Hayek, 55, and Michael Bahhouth, 56 years old.

The terrorist, Natan-Zada, was a military deserter residing in Tapoah settlement, in the West Bank; the settlement is slated for evacuation under the disengagement plan.

Abbas, Sharon Condemn the ‘Jewish Terror’

Both Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and the Israeli premier Sharon condemned the crime as an act of “Jewish Terror” aimed at thwarting the Israeli evacuation from Gaza and urged restraint.

“This sorrowful incident aims at obstructing the process of the (Israeli) withdrawal from Gaza,” Abbas decried in a written statement.

He called on the Israeli government to carry out its responsibilities towards innocent civilians.

Abbas branded the crime “a terrorist incident” and appealed to Palestinians not to retaliate. According to Israel’s Channel 10, Abbas has contacted Hamas leaders and urged them not to respond to the attack.

Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erakat told reporters that the Israeli government should immediately disarm Jewish settlers in the West Bank, adding that, “it should arrest and sue criminals and terrorists.”

“These criminals and terrorists killed three Palestinians in a cold-blooded manner. The Israeli government should confiscate the settlers' guns immediately in order to avoid repeat of such awful crimes,” said Erakat.

Hamas spokesman Mushir al-Masri urged Palestinians not to respond to “provocations and not to provide any pretexts or excuses to those wishing to halt the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.”

“By freeing the hand of settlers to shed Palestinian blood, the enemy is opening the door for resistance factions to respond to these Zionist crimes which take place during the calm,” he said.

Nonetheless al-Masri warned that, “This crime is not going to pass without tough punishment.”

The anti-occupation Islamic Jihad group also issued a similar warning but said any retaliatory attacks would take place in the West Bank or Israel, but not in Gaza.

Sharon also condemned the shooting spree as an act of “Jewish terror … aimed against innocent Palestinians, out of twisted thinking, aimed at stopping the disengagement,” adding that that he regarded the attack “very gravely.”

“I view this act of Jewish terror, which was aimed at innocent Palestinians with the twisted thinking that it would stop the disengagement plan, very gravely,” Sharon said in a statement released by his office.

Labor Party Whip MP Ephraim Sneh warned that, “The Jewish terror attack in Shilo is a sign of things to come in the next few weeks,” Sneh urged “the Israel Defense Forces must place a curfew on the communities” where the Jewish terrorists came from, a routine measure imposed on Palestinians by the Israeli Occupation forces (IOF) as a collective punishment.

US Sympathizes with Settlers, But Condemns Settler’s Attack

Meanwhile US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice herself on Wednesday offered sympathy for the Israeli settlers who are being evacuated from the Israeli-occupied Gaza Strip, but designated to her spokesman the condemnation of the Jewish terror act.

“Everyone empathizes with what the Israelis are facing,” Rice said in an interview, reported by The New York Times.

Israeli troops dragged sobbing Jewish settlers out of homes, synagogues and even a nursery school Wednesday and hauled them onto buses in a massive evacuation.

Throughout the day Wednesday, some 14,000 IOF troops entered six Jewish settlements — Morag, Neve Dekalim, Bedolah, Ganei Tal, Tel Katifa and Kerem Atzmona. By evening, all but Neve Dekalim were emptied, military officials and witnesses said.

Three colonies in the Gaza Strip and two more in the West Bank are confirmed evacuated so far.

However Rice added, “It cannot be Gaza only,” describing the Israeli evacuation as a “dramatic moment” in the Middle East.

She urged Israel and the Palestinians to quickly follow-up with more steps toward creation of a Palestinian state, The New York Times reported.

Separately the US State Department spokesman Sean McCormack condemned Wednesday’s settler attack.

“We condemn this attack, condemn acts of violence committed as part of this withdrawal process, and our condolences go out to the victims' families,” McCormack said.

McCormack said the United States had been in touch with the parties in the region to urge calm and respect for the rule of law.

On the Palestinian side, he said, “they have shown a seriousness of purpose in working very closely with the Israeli government, in seeing that the withdrawal is a success.”

The American Jewish Committee also strongly condemned the murder Wednesday of four Palestinians in Shiloh.

“This wanton attack on innocent Palestinians must be condemned in the harshest language,” said David A. Harris, executive director of the American Jewish Committee. “The murder of Palestinians who were employed in Shiloh is a blow to Jewish-Arab coexistence.”

The European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana also strongly condemned “the attack on Palestinian civilians near the northern West Bank settlement of Shiloh.”

Separately in an official statement, the EU Presidency, held by Britain, praised both Palestinians and Israelis for restraint during the disengagement while denouncing the killings.

The Presidency “urges both sides to continue [the restraint]... in the face of such a provocation,” the statement said.

Palestinian Civil Affairs Minister Mohammad Dahlan and Israeli “Defense” Minister Shaul Mofaz met Wednesday night to discuss several issues related to Israeli pullout from Gaza Strip and northern West Bank.

Saeb Erakat and Israeli Vice PM Shimon Peres also met in Tel Aviv on Wednesday and discussed changing the security status of the northern West Bank area from Area “B” to area “A.”

US Assistant Secretary of State David Welch accompanied by security coordinator William Ward made a surprise visit to the Gaza Strip on Tuesday and told Palestinian security officials they must coordinate and cooperate with Israeli forces during the evacuation of Israeli troops and settlers, AP had reported.

The sponsors of the roadmap to Israeli-Palestinian peace - the UN, the US, the EU and Russia - will meet in mid-September to assess Israel's disengagement from the Gaza Strip and the northern West Bank, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan's spokesman said Monday.

 
 
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