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Best Selection of Chiality Dolls & Toys MUSIC Gaza Lessons For The West Bank Does the experience of 5,000 Jews in the Gaza Strip, under Palestinian rule for 18 months, offer a window to the West Bank? LARRY DERFNER ISRAEL CORRESPONDENT A s Israel prepares for Pales- tinian autonomy in the West Bank, and wonders whether Jewish settlers there will be inundated by terror, Palestinian autonomy in Gaza enters its 18th month. The 800,000 Palestinians of Gaza run their own affairs, un- hindered by the Israeli army or Shin Bet intelligence agency. Is- raeli soldiers and Palestinian po- licemen ride up and down the Strip in joint jeep patrols. The roughly 5,000 Jewish settlers are separated from the surrounding Palestinian refugee camps by electrified fences, and there are more Israeli soldiers guarding the settlements than ever before. How has Palestinian autono- my treated the Jews of Gaza? What can be learned from this ex- periment that might help predict the future for the estimated 130,000 Jews in the West Bank? The relative size of the settler communities, and the difference in the way they are dispersed, make comparisons between the Jewish condition in Gaza and the West Bank difficult. Most of the Gazan Jews are concentrated in 16 settlements in the Gush Kalif enclave (with some 700 living in the isolated settlements of Net- zarim and Kfar Darom). West Bank Jews live in 126 settle- ments spread throughout the ter- ritory. "The Gaza settlements are more easily controlled," said an Israeli military source. "The set- tlers in Gaza are relatively iso- lated from the Palestinians, there are few access roads to them, and there are electrified fences pro- tecting them. In the West Bank the settlements are mixed in with the Palestinian sector, and there are thousands and thousands of Israelis — not settlers - driving through there every day." However, Israel is building a network of bypass roads around Palestinian cities and villages in the West Bank. These roads are for Israeli use, and will be guard- ed strictly by Israeli soldiers, so Jews can get where they're going without coming in contact with Palestinian autonomy. "If the set- tlers stick to these roads, and don't try to drive through the middle of Palestinian cities, they will have quite a degree of sepa- ration from the Palestinians," said Prof. Mark Heller, an au- thority on Palestinian affairs at Tel Aviv University's Jaffee Cen- ter for Strategic Studies. The army's raw statistics on terror in Gaza indicate that set- tlers in the Strip are in no more danger than they were before au- tonomy began in May 1994, and may even be a little safer. In the 6-1/2 years of intifada before au- tonomy, 19 Israeli civilians (set- tlers and others) were killed in Gaza, and 159 wounded. Under autonomy, three Israeli civilians (including New Jersey citizen Al- isa Flatow) have been killed and 37 wounded. (However, autono- my has proven much more dan- gerous for Israeli soldiers: 19 were killed in Gaza during the 3947 1V. 12 Mile Rd. • Berkley (810) 543-3115 Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30, Fri 10-8 On Any Video Transfer Century Camera 288-5444 With This Coupon. Expires I I/131195 L J 810-288-5444 Daily & Saturday 10-6 Friday 10-8 Give your heart an extra helping. Say no to high-fat foods. • 22 • American Heart NT Association A stone-throwing Palestinian youth tries to break away from two soldiers.