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March 11, 1994 - Image 42

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1994-03-11

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

News

A

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Jerusalem (JTA) = Violence
continued over the weekend
as Palestinians clashed with
Israeli security forces in the
territories and Arab youths
took angrily to the streets in
Jerusalem.
In the wake of the murders
of some 40 Palestinian wor-
shipers at a Hebron mosque,
at least two Palestinians
were killed after clashes in
the Nablus area, military
sources confirmed, while at
least seven were wounded in
separate incidents on the
weekend.
In Washington, a
Palestine Liberation Organ-
ization official, Nabil.
Sha'ath, held meetings last
week with State Department
officials, including Secretary
of State Warren
Christopher.
One Palestinian official
said that the Palestinians
thought the meeting with
Mr. Christopher "wasn't sat-
isfactory."
A sticking point was the
wording of a U.N. resolution
currently under considera-
tion that would condemn the
Feb. 25 killings in Hebron.
A State Department offi-
cial said that the United
States and the PLO had not
come to any agreement on
the resolution.
The Palestinians think the
resolution should include
mention of Jerusalem when
referring to the territories,
but the United States did not
agree, according to a Pales-
tinian official, who said Mr.
Christopher and his aides
"adhered to their declared
position."
The State Department of-
ficial said the United States
had not agreed to anything
outside the framework of the
Israeli- Palestinian declara-
tion of principles, which
formed the basis of the self-
rule accord signed last
September in Washington.
The PLO has called for an
armed international
presence in the territories to
protect Palestinians. Israel
has maintained its willing-
ness in principle to have an
unarmed international
presence in the territories,
as covered in the declaration
of principles.
As the diplomatic wrangl-
ing continues, however,
violence has erupted almost
daily in Israel and the ter-
ritories in the aftermath of
the killings at the Hebron
mosque.

In the Gush Katif set-
tlement in the Gaza Strip,
two Israelis were stabbed in
a greenhouse by three ter-
rorists.
One of the Israelis, Yit-
zhak Cohen, suffered serious
wounds, but he managed to
shoot and kill one of the
assailants and wound an-
other.
Hundreds of Arab youths
began rioting outside the
walls of the Old City follow-

Warren Christopher:
Met with officials.

ing heated speeches by local
PLO leaders at a rally in
eastern Jerusalem.
Police responded with tear
gas and rubber bullets, re-
portedly wounding 20 pro-
testers.
In light of the heightened
tensions, Israeli police took
the unusual step of closing
the plaza in front of the
Western Wall to Jewish
worshipers for more than an
hour.
Police were worried that,
with thousands of Palestin-
ians at prayer on the Temple
Mount, there would be a re-
peat of the violence that took
place week before, when
Arab youths threw stones at
Jewish worshipers below
after an Israeli settler
sprayed Muslim worshipers
at the Tomb of the Patriar-
chs with gunfire, killing at
least 40.
Thousands of Arab wor-
shipers at the Temple. Mount
left the area without any
major incident.
The decision by police to
remove Jewish worshipers
was sharply criticized by
Jerusalem's mayor and
others.

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