*Perilous Times*
Aug 7, 9:55 AM EDT
*Israel Removes Settlers From West Bank*
By BEN HUBBARD
Associated Press Writer
HEBRON, West Bank (AP) -- Israeli police, using sledgehammers, chain
saws and power clippers, stormed a building in the biblical city of
Hebron early Tuesday and dragged out hundreds of Jewish settlers who had
holed up there illegally.
Settlers spit and hurled stones, water, oil and cement powder as police,
backed by army troops, broke through fortified doors and carried out the
squatters one by one. Three settlers sealed themselves inside a concrete
bunker built for the standoff.
"This is a crime against justice and against Jewish history," said Noam
Arnon, a spokesman for the Hebron settlers. "I am sure we will return.
Hebron has a long history and we will return."
Danny Poleg, a police spokesman, said four soldiers, 14 police officers
and 12 settlers were injured during the evacuation. Eleven settlers were
briefly detained and two arrested.
Hebron, a frequent flashpoint of tensions between Israelis and
Palestinians, is home to about 500 Jewish settlers living in heavily
guarded enclaves among some 160,000 Palestinians. Clashes between the
sides are frequent.
Israel controls the center of the city, including a disputed area that
is holy to both Jews and Muslims - the traditional burial site of the
biblical patriarchs Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and three of their wives.
Its large military presence often hinders the movement of Palestinians.
The Palestinians control the rest of Hebron.
"You're Hamas people!" one woman screamed repeatedly at Israeli police
while being dragged from the scene. The reference was to the radical
Islamic Palestinian group that controls the Gaza Strip and is sworn to
Israel's destruction.
After forcing open one of the building's doors, police encountered 30
youths singing songs who cursed the soldiers as they entered. Many sat
atop a 4-foot-high concrete bunker in which three settlers had
barricaded themselves. It took police three hours to bore through the
neighboring wall to remove them.
The two-story building evacuated Tuesday stands in the central
marketplace, which the army shut down in 1994 after Jewish militant
Baruch Goldstein opened fire at the Tomb of the Patriarchs and killed 29
Palestinians.
The settlers initially moved into the structure - a vacant store - more
than six years ago, variously evacuating and re-entering it as the case
made its way through the Israeli court system.
Israel's Supreme Court ruled the settlers' presence there was illegal,
but they ignored orders to evacuate. Hundreds of supporters moved into
the building in recent days, reinforcing the doors and windows with
metal and concrete in preparation for the raid.
Settlers claim the property was owned by Jewish families for decades
until Jordanian authorities seized it after the 1948 Israeli war of
independence. Israel captured the West Bank from Jordan in 1967.
Tuesday's operation came as Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert is
reviewing a proposal whereby his country would cede territory to the
Palestinians under a final peace accord in order to hold on to major
West Bank settlements, the Haaretz newspaper reported.
The Israeli land would be meant to compensate the Palestinians for the
roughly 5 percent of the West Bank occupied by Jewish settlement blocs,
the newspaper said. The architect of the plan is Israeli President
Shimon Peres, who won a Nobel Peace Prize for his role in the 1993
interim peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians, Haaretz said.
A spokesman for Peres, Yoram Dori, did not deny that a land trade
proposal has been submitted to Olmert. "I don't know of a plan that has
all of the details that are given in the article," Dori replied when
asked to comment on the Haaretz report.
He added that Haaretz had incorrectly reported that the president
proposed giving up land where Israeli Arab communities currently stand.
Haaretz said Olmert has not rejected the proposal's main concepts, but
the prime minister's office issued a statement expressing "amazement at
this erroneous article."
"Such a plan has not been considered, nor is it being raised for
discussion in any forum," the statement said.
Peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians broke down in
early 2001 following the launch of the Palestinian uprising against
Israel. Olmert and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas have met several
times in recent months to discuss issues related to the peace process,
the most recent talks happening Monday in the West Bank town of Jericho.
Israel agrees to the formation of a Palestinian state in the West Bank
and Gaza Strip, but the two sides are deeply divided over what the
borders should be. Israel wants to annex the West Bank settlement blocs
while Palestinians want Israel to withdraw from all of the territory,
captured along with the Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem in the 1967
Mideast war.
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Associated Press Writer Laurie Copans in Jerusalem contributed to this
report.