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Jerusalem (JTA) — Jewish
settlers continued their-
violent protests against at-
tacks by Palestinian ter-
rorists and issued promises
that they will continue to
employ violence as a means
for getting the government
to take their demands for
security seriously.
Two Palestinians were
shot and lightly injured by
Jewish settlers who were
protesting the killing the
day before of 30-year-old
Ephraim Ayubi.
A caller to Israel Radio
said the Committee for
Security on the Roads of
Judea and Samaria claimed
responsibility for the attack
on a Palestinian father and
son, who were on their way
to the West Bank town of
Nablus.
The settlers say that these
attacks will teach Arabs
that terrorist acts will not go
unanswered, and that they
may escalate their violent
response in days to come.
One resident of the West
Bank settlement of Kiryat
Arba told Israel Radio that
Jewish residents of Judea
and Samaria, the biblical

movement and a former
Knesset member from the
National Religious Party.
The Damascus-based
Democratic Front for the
Liberation of Palestine, a
group opposed to the peace
process, claimed respon-
sibility for the attack.
The deteriorating security
situation prompted four no-
confidence motions in the
Knesset by the government
opposition. All were
defeated.
Palestinian leader Faisal
Husseini, who has played a
key role in the peace
negotiations with Israel,
said that the Israel Defense
Force is responsible for

name for the territory,
would not change their
violent tactics.
"Our world will be secure,
and if our government
doesn't know how to take
care of that, but on the con-
trary, it stimulates terror,
we will take care of that,"
the settler said.
"There won't be any Arabs
on this road," he said, referr-
ing to his group's blockade of
roads leading to Arab
villages in the West Bank.
Four Palestinians were re-
portedly shot by Jews in
retaliation for Mr. Ayubi's
murder. The same day, hun-
dreds of settlers held a
violent demonstration in
Jerusalem's city center.
The demonstrators, issu-
ing calls for the resignation
of Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin, clashed with police
attempting to disperse the
crowds who gathered.
The demonstrations oc-
curred after terrorists at-
tacked the car of Rabbi
Chaim Druckman near the
West Bank town of Hebron.
Rabbi Druckman is a
founding member of the
Gush Emunim settlers

Terrorist attacks
will not go
unanswered.

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preventing settlers' attacks
against Arabs.
Mr. Husseini called for an
international force to main-
tain order in the Gaza Strip
and West Bank.
He said that if the violence
against Arabs did not stop,
Palestinian negotiators
would insist on discussing
the future status of Jewish
settlements during the cur-
rent round of autonomy
talks with Israel.
The talks — broken off last
week in the Sinai border
town of Taba after Palestin-
ian negotiators balked at.
Israeli plans to redeploy
rather than withdraw troops
in the Gaza Strip and
Jericho — were resumed at a
secret location in Cairo this
week.
Deputy Defense Minister
Mordechai Gur responded to
settlers' security concerns by
saying that the government
'would do our utmost to put
an end to this terrorism."
He said he expected many
Palestinians to wake up to
the promise of the peace
agreement and abandon ter-
rorism.
Mr. Gur acknowledged
that there are Palestinian
extremists bent on destroy-
ing the self-rule accord
signed by Israel and the
Palestine Liberation Organ-
ization on Sept. 13 in Wash-
ington.
But Mr. Gur added that he
was confident the rejec-
tionists would be over-
come. ❑

Mourners attend the funeral of a slain settler.

