quote:Plannen tot ontruiming
Op 4 februari 2004 verklaarde de Israëlische minister-president, Ariel Sharon, vijftien nederzettingen die niet pal tegen de Israëlische grens aanliggen te willen ontruimen. Uiteindelijk komt hij overeen met de Amerikaanse president, George W. Bush, dat alle Israëlische nederzettingen in de Gazastrook zullen worden ontruimd en een viertal nederzettingen op de Westelijke Jordaanoever. Bush geeft Sharon hierop enkele garanties in een brief.
Een ruime meerderheid van de Israëlische bevolking is volgens peilingen voor ontruiming van de nederzettingen.
Een raadgevend referendum van de leden van Sharons Likoed-partij op 2 mei 2004 wees het voorstel echter af. Op de dag van het referendum werden in de Gazastrook een zwangere Israëlische en haar vier dochtertjes van 11, 9, 7 en 2 in een aanslag vermoord. Peilingen die vooraf werden gehouden wezen op een waarschijnlijke, doch aanzienlijk kleinere, nederlaag voor Sharon. Na het afkeuren door zijn partijleden en enig beraad, besluit Sharon hoe dan ook zijn plannen door te zetten. Dit besluit leidt tot een regelmatige ondermijning van de regering in het Israëlische parlement, waardoor Sharon zijn coalitie moet verbreden. Coalitiepartner Shinui wordt uit de regering gewerkt en wordt vervangen door de grotere Israëlische Partij van de Arbeid.
Op 6 oktober 2004 verklaart Dov Weissglass, hoofdadviseur en voormalig stafchef van Ariel Sharon, in een interview met Ha'aretz dat het hoofddoel van het ontruimingsplan is om Israëls greep op de verschillende nederzettingen op de Westelijke Jordaanoever te verstevigen, het vredesproces te bevriezen (op formaldehyde zetten) en zo de creatie van een toekomstige Palestijnse staat onbeperkt uit te stellen.
Na het verhinderen van een 50.000 man grote Mars op de Gazastrook van tegenstanders van de ontruiming, laat Ariel Sharon horen dat de ontruiming - gepland voor 15 augustus 2005 - vroeger zou kunnen beginnen. Op 23 juli maant Condoleezza Rice de Israëlische regering aan om de Gazastrook na de ontruiming niet af te sluiten van de buitenwereld en vrije toegang tot de Westelijke Jordaanoever te garanderen. De Israëlische Ontruimingsautoriteit heeft eind juli 2005 van 750 van de 1.800 Israëlische families die in de Gazastrook wonen een aanvraag tot subsidie ontvangen om te relocaliseren naar een woning binnen Israël.
Na de ontruiming zal de Gazastrook omringd worden door een hoogtechnologisch complex van prikkeldraad, hekken, elektronische sensoren, wachttorens met vanop afstand bestuurde machinegeweren en honderden videocamera's en nachtkijkers. Checkpoints zullen nog steeds controleren wie en welke goederen er in & uit de Gazastrook gaan. Nieuwe Israëlische legerbasissen zullen naast de Gazastrook komen en dichtbij gelegen Israëlische dorpen zullen omringd worden met een betonnen muur van ongeveer 6,7 meter hoog om ze te beschermen tegen eventuele sluipschutters. De constructiekosten van dit complex worden geraamd op 220 miljoen dollar.
quote:GazaStrook: De bevolking
Gaza is één van de dichtsbevolkste gebieden van de wereld. Er wonen zo'n 1.3 miljoen Palestijnen, waarvan ongeveer 33% in vluchtelingenkampen verblijft. Hiernaast wonen er ook zo'n 8.000 Joodse kolonisten.
Gazastrook: Nederzettingen en beveiliging
Israëlische nederzettingen beslaan zo'n 15% van de Gazastrook. De grenzen, en overgangswegen worden alle door Israël bewaakt, net als sommige wegen in Gaza.
Misverstandje - ik heb het over de officiele kleuren die in Israel gebruikt worden. Er wordt met lintjes gewerkt, blauwe en oranje lintjes en veel mensen dragen ook kleding in die kleur. Zo is het meteen vrij duidelijk waar je staat.quote:Op vrijdag 5 augustus 2005 19:20 schreef sp3c het volgende:
das wat vergezocht denk ik, die kaartjes hebben vrij standaard kleurenschema's
Nederlandse (militaire kaartjes?) is the good guy ook altijd blauw en de badguy is rood
Creepy wel.quote:Sharon slaapt met geladen pistool onder kussen
Uitgegeven: 5 augustus 2005 13:17
JERUZALEM - De Israëlische premier Sharon slaapt met een geladen pistool onder zijn kussen wegens de constante dreiging van een aanslag op zijn leven. Dit meldde de Israëlische krant Maariv vrijdag.
Volgens Israëlische veiligheidsdiensten komt het gevaar van ultranationalistische joodse groeperingen. Die zijn fel tegenstander van de ontmanteling van joodse nederzettingen in de Gazastrook later deze maand. Een aanslag op het leven van Sharon zou de ontruiming mogelijk voorkomen.
Vorige maand sprak een groep van twintig radicalen tijdens een religieus ritueel een vloek uit over Sharon. Naar verluidt zou een dergelijke vloek ook over de toenmalige premier Rabin zijn uitgesproken, voordat een joodse extremist hem in 1995 vermoordde.
Ja, het zou wel een beetje propaganda kunnen zijn. De vergelijkingen met de toestand voor de moord op Rabin zijn ook niet van de lucht de laatste dagen.quote:Op zaterdag 6 augustus 2005 00:21 schreef sp3c het volgende:
ik geloof er helemaal nix van
als er iets aan wapentuig onder zijn kussen ligt dan is het een agent van de gehieme dienst met een machinepistool maar dat slaapt denk ik ongemakkelijk
quote:Q&A: Sharon's Gaza plan
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's Gaza disengagement plan is set to go ahead this August, with the fragile support of the country's parliament and in the face of a deeply divided Israeli public.
The withdrawal will bring some of the most significant changes on the ground in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict since the initial occupation of Gaza and the West Bank in 1967.
It is also the first time Israel has removed state-sanctioned settlements since it gave the Sinai peninsula back to Egypt in 1982.
Q: What does the plan entail?
It envisages the evacuation of over 8,000 Israelis from 21 heavily-fortified settlements in the Gaza Strip, and hundreds more from four settlements in the northern West Bank.
Numerous Israeli army posts which serve to protect the Gaza settlers will also be removed - but Israel will keep control of Gaza's borders, coastline and airspace and reserves the right to re-enter the territory at will.
The estimated 1.3m Palestinians living in the Gaza Strip - who live under harsh travel restrictions - will be free to move into the evacuated zones (about one fifth of Gaza's total area) as soon as the Israelis leave.
Q: When will the withdrawal take place?
It is due to begin on 15 August. Israel said original date was put back by three weeks in order to avoid a clash with a Jewish period of mourning which ends on 14 August, called Tisha Be Av.
The evacuation of civilians in the Gaza Strip and West Bank settlements is expected to take three or four weeks, with a similar period set aside for the dismantling and evacuation of military installations.
Q: Who will evacuate the settlers?
The Israeli army has been given the task of knocking on the doors of settlers' houses and evacuating them, while thousands of Israeli policemen will be involved in other key aspects of what will be an enormous military operation.
Due to feelings of conflicting loyalties, hundreds of Israeli reserve soldiers have refused to take part in the evacuation, settler news service Arutz 7 reported.
An Israeli soldier who refused orders to help demolish settler buildings was sentenced to 56 days' jail on 28 June.
For similar reasons, Israeli policemen who live in the Gaza Strip have been excused from taking part in the physical evacuation.
The Palestinian security forces were initially excluded from contributing to the operation - a move heavily criticised by Palestinian leaders - until mid-June, when joint meetings on co-ordinating the withdrawal took place for the first time.
Q: Where will the settlers go?
Some will go to Israeli towns and kibbutzes throughout the country, others will be accommodated in new homes built in areas outside the Gaza Strip.
A sticking point in negotiations between the settler groups and the Israeli government has been the quality of these homes, with many settlers refusing to move into temporary accommodation.
A compromise solution has been reached in some cases, for example in Nitzanim, north of the Gaza Strip, where relocated settlers will live in caravans until permanent homes are built nearby.
Each relocated family can expect to receive between $200,000 to $300,000 in compensation.
Q: What happens to the houses the settlers leave behind?
Israel initially planned to demolish over 1,200 Israeli-built houses in the Gaza Strip.
Emotions run high on this issue, with some settlers being quoted as saying they would rather burn their homes than see Palestinians take them over.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has said that the Israeli houses will be destroyed immediately after evacuation. In this case, Israel may pay the Palestinians as subcontractors in charge of clearing the debris.
Q: What are the security arrangements after the disengagement?
Palestinian forces will be in charge on the ground, but Israel will continue to control the perimeter of the Strip and Gaza airspace, as well as patrolling the Gaza coast.
Under discussion still is the military presence on the 10-km Philadelphi Route between the Gaza Strip and Egypt which some fear will become a conduit for arms smugglers.
The Israeli cabinet's resolution on the disengagement says the narrow Philadelphi Route is an "essential security requirement", and Mr Sharon has hinted - against Palestinian wishes - that Israeli soldiers will remain there if Israel is dissatisfied with increased Egyptian and Palestinian border security.
Q: Will it all go according to plan?
While most settlers are expected to accept the government's compensation package and leave peacefully, it is likely that there will be concerted attempts from others who wish to thwart the disengagement.
Anti-disengagement protests in the form of marches and road blocks have been regular occurrences in Israel since April, and larger-scale blockages are expected when the disengagement begins in earnest.
In the Strip itself, such as in the major Gush Katif settlement, settler families have been joined by hundreds of anti-disengagement activists from outside Gaza who are preparing to make a stand when the soldiers arrive.
Any protesters wishing to enter Gaza during the pullout period will, however, have to evade several circles of Israeli army and police who will surround the Gaza Strip and the settlements within it.
Away from the Gaza Strip, army officials have been quoted as saying that the northern West Bank evacuation will be even harder, as the area is not as easy to secure.
Israeli chief of staff Dan Halutz has said that Israeli soldiers will not be "sitting ducks" and will respond to any life-threatening fire, whether from Jews or Palestinians.
Any disturbance from the Palestinian side is less likely, with militant groups such as Hamas stating that it will not disturb the withdrawal.
Q: How will the disengagement's success be judged?
From the Israeli point of view, the success of Mr Sharon's plan - proposed independently of the US-sponsored peace plan known as the roadmap - will be judged by whether it causes a drop in the number of people killed in violence in the region, not just in and around Gaza, but throughout Israel.
If, however, attacks launched from Gaza on Israeli targets continue, or suspicion grows that militant groups such as Hamas or Islamic Jihad are being allowed to rearm in the Gaza Strip, the plan may be viewed as a risk that the Israeli premier should not have taken.
For Palestinians the withdrawal - even if successful - falls far short of their demands for an independent state, and even in Gaza many are gloomy about the prospects that their lives will significantly improved.
Q: What does the future hold for the Palestinians in Gaza?
Nearly two-thirds of Gaza's Arab population live below the poverty line, according to the International Labour Organisation. With the extra farm land and the removal of some restrictions placed on them because of settlements, there is some room for optimism.
A crucial factor in the development of Gaza will be its links with Palestinian territory in the West Bank, and the outside world.
According to the landmark 1993 Oslo peace deal, Israel must guarantee a "safe passage" between the two territories that is subject to Palestinian control. Two leading plans currently call for the construction of a sunken road between the two zones, and a railway.
For in the near future the population will still live under the shadow of Israeli occupation in a narrow corridor of land, even if the settlements have gone and the Israel army has pulled back to more remote positions.
Q: What impact will the disengagement have on the peace process?
The Palestinian Authority line on the disengagement is both hot and cold: it is welcomed as "the beginning of the implementation of the roadmap leading to an independent Palestinian state", but equally it is "a blueprint for Mr Sharon's vision of an emasculated Palestinian state".
The Palestinian leadership has said clearly that Israel will not be given any political concessions for removing settlements that are illegal under international law.
Israel and the US have insisted that the disengagement from Gaza will not replace progress on the US-sponsored roadmap for peace in the region.
But Israeli officials have spoken, with varying degrees of candour, about how disengagement is an opportunity tighten Israel's grip on occupied East Jerusalem and its settlements in the West Bank.
Therefore, the impact of the disengagement on the troubled peace process may be limited. If, however, the plan is successful in reducing deaths in the conflict and increasing trust between the two sides, its long-term impact could be immeasurable.
quote:Sharon on firm ground despite FinMin walkout -polls
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - A narrow majority of Israelis support Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's plan to withdraw from the occupied Gaza Strip next week despite the 11th-hour resignation of his top government rival, a newspaper poll found on Monday.
Finance Minister Benjamin Netanyahu quit in protest on Sunday, saying Sharon's vision of "disengaging" from fighting with the Palestinians would harm Israel's security. Political analysts saw the move as an early challenge to the premiership. The walkout by Netanyahu, a former prime minister popular in the ruling Likud Party, was too late to prevent cabinet approval for the removal of Jewish settlers due to start after Aug. 15.
A survey by the biggest daily Yedioth Ahronoth said Israeli support for the plan to quit Gaza and a corner of the West Bank, lands captured in the 1967 Middle East war, had dipped slightly after Netanyahu's resignation, which rattled local markets. The newspaper found that 55 percent of Israelis back the pullout, down from 58 percent in an undated previous poll.
The number of those opposed to the plan rose from 35 percent to 39 percent. Six percent of 500 respondents were undecided, according to the poll, which had a 4.5 percent margin of error. Right-wing opponents, including many in Sharon's Likud, see the withdrawal as a capitulation to a 4 1/2-year-old Palestinian revolt, as well as setting a precedent for further possible handovers in the occupied West Bank and Arab East Jerusalem.
The hawkish Netanyahu had long opposed removing all 21 settlements in the Gaza Strip and four of 120 in the West Bank despite consistent support for the plan among most Israelis.
Netanyahu, 55, is widely expected to challenge Sharon's leadership at some stage after the pullout and could benefit from the support of opponents of the Gaza pullout. Sharon is 77.
But a separate survey suggested that Sharon's standing in Likud remains strong. The prime minister appointed a party loyalist, Vice Premier Ehud Olmert, as Netanyahu's replacement.
Of Likud voters polled by Maariv daily, 51 percent called Sharon their preferred candidate for prime minister in elections expected next year. Thirty-four percent backed Netanyahu, according to the poll, which had a 4.4 percent margin of error.
Palestinians welcome the Gaza withdrawal but suspect it is a ruse to cement Israel's hold on West Bank settlement blocs. Less than 4 percent of 240,000 settlers will be affected by the plan.
Bron: Reuters
Het lijken inderdaad net oranjesupporters bij een voetbalwedstrijd. Volgens mij staan er nog een aantal van dergelijke protestacties gepland voor de terugtrekking begint.quote:Thousands rally against Gaza plan
Tens of thousands of Israelis have staged a rally in Tel Aviv in protest at plans to pull out of Gaza, six days before the withdrawal is due to begin. Demonstrators clad in the symbolic orange colour of the protest movement filled Rabin Square, where successive speakers denounced the evacuation. Opponents of the plan have stepped up their protests in recent days, vowing to sabotage the withdrawal operation.
Jewish settlers are due to be removed from Gaza and part of the West Bank. Protesters waving flags and banners streamed into the square in what is likely to be the last such mass show of resolve against the plan before the withdrawal gets under way.
Giant posters proclaimed "Gush Katif, I swear fidelity" and "Samaria, I swear fidelity" - references to a doomed settlement bloc and the biblical Hebrew name for the northern West Bank. "Nothing is over. We must go to the south, on the roads. God will hear us," Yigal Kamineski, rabbi of Gush Katif, told the crowd. Leaflets were distributed, telling supporters of the settler movement where to go as the pullout begins, to try to block the roads into Gaza and disrupt the process.
The square where the rally was held is the place where former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was shot dead in 1995 by a right-wing Jewish gunman opposed to the peace accords with the Palestinians. The demonstration comes a day after tens of thousands of Orthodox Jews held a mass prayer gathering at the Western Wall in Jerusalem - Judaism's holiest site - against the impending pull-out. The withdrawal of settlers from the Gaza Strip is due to get under way on Wednesday next week, with a further withdrawal from four settlements in the West Bank soon afterwards.
Laten blijven tussen mensen die ze haten, en waardoor ze gehaat worden? Ik denk ook niet dat dat een erg goede oplossing zou zijn. Zonder de aanwezigheid van, en dus bescherming van het Israëlische leger, kan dat nooit lang goed blijven gaan.quote:Op vrijdag 12 augustus 2005 08:43 schreef Chadi het volgende:
Ik heb er toch een dubbel gevoel bij. Het is gewoon niet goed om mensen hun huis uit te trekken. Geef ze in ieder geval de keus om achter te blijven als ze dat willen.
Ja maar je geeft ze een optie om onder bescherming en gezag te komen van de PA. Als ze dan weg willen of willen blijven hebben ze uiteindelijk zelf die keus gemaakt.quote:Op vrijdag 12 augustus 2005 08:51 schreef kLowJow het volgende:
[..]
Laten blijven tussen mensen die ze haten, en waardoor ze gehaat worden? Ik denk ook niet dat dat een erg goede oplossing zou zijn. Zonder de aanwezigheid van, en dus bescherming van het Israëlische leger, kan dat nooit lang goed blijven gaan.
ik denk niet dat ze ooit hun heilige stad opgeven.quote:Op zaterdag 13 augustus 2005 08:50 schreef NorthernStar het volgende:
To-do lijstje na Augustus 2005:Gaza strook Westbank Jeruzalem
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