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Jerusalem (JTA) — Steady
progress in the peace talks
coupled with a sense that the
world had forgotten their
fate were among the reasons
that the Palestinians
deported to Lebanon cited
for their acceptance of the
latest Israeli plan for their
return home.
Faced with illness and few
other alternatives, the 395
remaining Palestinian
deportees whom Israel ex-
pelled to Lebanon last Dec.
17 decided to accept the
Israeli offer, in a move an-
nounced by officials with the
International Red Cross.
Under the plan, 192 of the
deportees will return next
month to the administered
territories, and the balance
will be allowed back by the
end of the year.
Most of the deportees, who
have been living in a tent
camp just beyond Israeli
army lines in southern Leb-
anon, are members of the ex-
tremist Hamas movement,
while others belong to the
equally militant Islamic
Jihad.
Originally, 415 activists
were expelled for an indefi-
nite period to the barren
stretches north of the Israeli-
controlled border security
zone. Nineteen of them were
later returned to Israel be-
cause they were ill or be-
cause Israeli authorities
admitted they had been ex-
pelled in error. And one
subsequently fled; his cur-
rent whereabouts are
unknown.
The expulsion took place
following a wave of terrorist
attacks in Israel at the end
of last year. The Lebanese
authorities did not let the
deportees enter Lebanon
proper, and they eventually
settled at a camp at Marj a-
Zuhur, just north of the
security zone.
The deportees had been
holding out for an "all or no
one" agreement, insisting
that they would remain
where they were if Israel did
not allow all of them to
return to their homes in the
West Bank and Gaza Strip.
But under the latest
agreement, 197 of the
deportees will be allowed to
return in September, and
the remaining 198 by the
end of December.
Abdul Aziz al-Rantisi, the
leader of the 395 deportees,
told reporters who had
gathered at the Palestin-
Benjamin Netanyahu:
Sees no rationale in move.
fans' hillside camp that the
men had unanimously ap-
proved the latest Israeli
offer, noting that the deci-
sion had been forced on them
by the continued illness of
more than 100 of the men.
Other reasons that Mr.
Rantisi cited for their accep-
tance of the Israeli offer in-
cluded a slackening of media
attention to their plight, the
failure of U.N. Security
Council Resolution 799 to
bring about their release
and the continuation of the
The expulsion
took place
following a wave
of terrorist
attacks in Israel
at the end
of last year.
once- threatened peace talks,
which the Muslim funda-
mentalists oppose.
The Israeli army has al-
ready begun preparations
for dealing with the return
of the deportees and intends
to allow festive receptions
for those deportees who will
return home.
However, many will not.
Those who were deported
from prison will be returned
to prison cells; others will be
detained pending legal pro-
ceedings against them.
The opposition parties in
Israel issued urgent calls
asking Prime Minister Yit-