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August 11, 1995 - Image 106

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1995-08-11

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

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AT COMMERCE PLACE

Protestors' Actions
As Talks Are Renewed

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WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE

Two settlers comfort a soldier sent to remove them from the protest site.

Jerusalem (JTA) — Demonstra-
tors renewed their protests
against Israel's ongoing negotia-
tions with the Palestinians as
Foreign Minister Shimon Peres
and Palestine Authority leader
Yassir Arafat failed to make any
significant progress in their talks.
Demonstrators who had
staked out a hillside near Nebi
Samuel, located north of
Jerusalem, were cleared out by
security forces.
The evacuation took five min-
utes and there were no serious
clashes, according to local news
reports.
The protest at Nebi Samuel —
and another on a hilltop near the
West Bank settlement of Beit El
— marked the resumption of four
days of often stormy protests
launched last week by settler
groups opposed to ceding West
Bank land in any future peace
deal with the Palestinians.
The protests were suspended
for three days in response to an
appeal from President Ezer
Weizman.
Most of those at the Nebi
Samuel protests were residents
of Jerusalem and nearby com-
munities.
"We are not 'settlers' in the un-
derstanding of the word as it has
been used here," said protester
Tami Quinn. "We have our
homes in Jerusalem, but we do
support the idea that the land of
Israel belongs to the people of Is-
rael. We could not sit silently."
The demonstrators said the
site near Nebi Samuel was state
land that, under the terms of the
Palestinian self-rule accord,
would be handed over to the
Palestinian Authority.
Meanwhile, the right-wing
group Zu Artzenu, or 'This is Our
Land," announced that it was
launching a nationwide effort
against Israel's peace policies
with the Palestinians.
Members of the group said at
a news conference that they

planned to block major highways
and intersections throughout Is-
rael as part of the settlers cam-
paign of civil disobedience.
The protests and threats of dis-
ruptions came as Mr. Peres and
Mr.Arafat met in the Egyptian
resort of Taba. At the same time,
Israeli and Palestinian negotiat-
ing teams resumed their talks
across the border in nearby Eilat.
The Peres-Arafat meeting was
held in an attempt to overcome
differences holding up an agree-
ment for the extension of Pales-
tinian self-rule in the West Bank.
Among the main issues of con-
tention are: security, water
rights, electricity and the partic-
ipation of residents of eastern
Jerusalem in Palestinian elec-
tions.
Another issue is a Palestinian
demand for the transfer of state
land in the West Bank. Israel Ra-
dio quoted Mr. Peres as saying
that Israel is ready to transfer
authority over the areas to the
Palestinians, but not actual sov-
ereign rights to the land.
Before attending the Taba
meeting, Mr. Peres told the Knes-
set's Foreign Affairs and Defense
Committee that he hoped that
the talks with Mr. Arafat would
help resolve those issues.
Mr. Peres was quoted as
telling committee members that
an agreement could be wrapped
up soon.
But sources at the meeting
also quoted Mr. Peres as saying
that if there is a delay, it would
not be the worst thing.
Mr. Peres, in an interview
with Israel Radio, dismissed set-
tlers' demands that the next
phase of the self-rule agreement
be put before the Israeli elec-
torate in a national referendum.
"The settlers are like any oth-
er citizens of Israel who can come
to discuss things concerning them,"
Mr. Peres said.
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabine
expressed similar sentiments.

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