Sharon Drops Bombshell: Gaza Settlements to Go
Reuters
Monday, February 2, 2004; 10:29 AM
By Matt Spetalnick
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
said Monday he planned to evacuate almost all of the Jewish
settlements in the Gaza Strip, dropping a political bombshell
that stunned friends and foes alike.
"I have given the order to plan for the evacuation of 17
settlements in the Gaza Strip," the right-wing prime minister
told the Haaretz newspaper. "I am working on the assumption
that in the future there will be no Jews in Gaza."
Sharon, once considered the godfather of the settlement
movement, later told his pro-settler Likud party the proposal
he will take to Washington later this month will also call for
removing a smaller number of Jewish enclaves in the West Bank.
But he gave no time frame for uprooting settlements, one of
the thorniest points of conflict with the Palestinians.
It was the first time Sharon had revealed plans for such a
far-reaching withdrawal from territories Israel seized in the
1967 Middle East war, and sparked immediate outrage from
settler leaders. "I am in shock," Likud legislator Yehiel Hazan
said.
Sharon's move appeared aimed at showing Washington he is
serious about moving ahead with a disengagement strategy to
remove some isolated settlements and draw a "security line"
around others, absorbing large swathes of occupied land.
"Usually when the Israeli government speaks about
evacuation of settlements, it aims only at public relations,"
Palestinian cabinet member Saeb Erekat told Reuters. "If Israel
wants to leave Gaza ... no Palestinian will stand in its way."
SURGE OF VIOLENCE
The surprise announcement came amid a surge in Israeli-
Palestinian violence over the past week that has cast further
doubt on the chances of reviving a U.S.-backed peace "road
map."
Despite the bloodshed, Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed
Qurie said preparations were under way for his first summit
with Sharon since taking office in November.
Shortly after Qurie spoke, Sharon's words appeared on the
Haaretz Web site, calling for evacuation of what he described
as "problem" settlements in Gaza. His plan entails removal of
all but two or three enclaves in the 360-square-km
(139-square-mile) strip where more than a million Palestinians
live in poverty.
Opinion polls show a strong majority of Israelis willing to
part with Gaza settlements. The largest concentration of
settlers is in more than 120 enclaves in the West Bank.
"The prime minister intends to go to Washington with an
offer of removing large chunks of settlements in Gaza and a
smaller chunk in (the West Bank)," Likud legislator Michael
Eitan told reporters after Sharon addressed a Likud meeting.
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