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Protest against evacuation from hilltop outpost. (AP)
McCarthyism all the rage on left with proposed "Nazi symbol" ban
U.S. Jews arrive in Israel to show solidarity with Israelis to be expelled
Anti-expulsion vigil to be held near Yad Vashem dedication
Anti-expulsion protesters shut down Tel Aviv freeway
IDF "Training kit" has "news report" of scores of disengagement opponents killed
Views: I know what you did this summer
Again, Sharon defies party decision to force referendum before retreat
Views: Gaza Requiem
Views: The Bully and the Nerd: A Tale of Two Camps
AG proposes outlawing "inciting" expressions even if they don't lead to violence

 
Israel police to disarm settlers as fears of massive resistance grows
By Associated Press  February 22, 2005
 
Israeli police said Tuesday they would disarm Jewish militants who threaten violence ahead of a Gaza pullout and assign nearly all its field officers to evacuate settlers and control protests -- signs of mounting concern the withdrawal could turn bloody.

Jewish settlers said they would set up a military-style operation, complete with general staff, to try to block the evacuation, set for the summer -- partly through civil disobedience and partly by lobbying lawmakers to bring down the government over a crucial budget vote.

The Palestinian prime minister, facing his own rebellion, promised a drastic overhaul of his Cabinet in what could be the start of long-sought reform. A vote on the new Cabinet, to be composed largely of professional appointees, was expected Wednesday.

Israeli settler leaders have said they would use only passive resistance in their struggle against the pullout. But there are fears that the most militant among them might open fire on security forces assigned to evacuate them.

Public Security Minister Gideon Ezra told Israel Radio on Tuesday that police would disarm Jewish settlers who urge violence to disrupt the pullout.

"Anyone who calls for using weapons or other illegal means, will be taken care of," Ezra said. "We'll simply take their arms ahead of time. We don't have to wait for the (evacuation) date to take their weapons."

Virtually all settlers are armed, many carrying army-issue weapons for defense against possible attack by Palestinian militants. Disarming even some of them would be unprecedented.

Emily Amrusy, a spokeswoman for the council of Jewish settlements, said no one has been informed that arms would be confiscated.

Amrusy said she expected opponents of a withdrawal to mobilize at least 100,000 protesters to stage huge sit-down strikes in Gaza and across the country. Protesters will chain and handcuff themselves to boulders and other objects, she said.

"We will sit there, like sacks of potatoes," Amrusy said. "It's enough for them not to move, and they will need four policemen to dislodge each person.... We will make the evacuation so difficult that police will say it's impossible to evacuate so many."

The army is expected to seal Gaza to protesters before the evacuation to reduce the resistance.

Israel is also evacuating four small settlements in the West Bank, and there is concern that extremists will join the struggle against removal there, as well, much as they have resisted attempts by soldiers to remove tiny unauthorized hilltop outposts.

In a related development, the army on Tuesday named Maj. Gen. Dan Halutz as incoming chief of staff to replace Lt. Gen. Moshe Yaalon, whose term was not extended by the customary year. Halutz is to take command before the pullout.

As air force commander, Halutz ignited a controversy when he told a local newspaper that he sleeps well at night despite a 2003 bombing raid in Gaza that killed 14 civilians, many of them children, along with a targeted Hamas leader.

Police will not be not understaffed for the pullout, police spokesman Gil Kleiman said. "With what we have, it will be very difficult, but there is no question the disengagement will go off," he said.

Police will assign some 18,000 officers, or nearly the entire field force, to the withdrawal, including 2,500 unarmed police officers who will evacuate settlers who refuse to leave voluntarily, Kleiman said. An additional 4,000 will be posted at passages into Gaza, and the rest will deal with demonstrations across the country, he said.

Settlers plan to open another front by lobbying lawmakers to defeat the long-overdue 2005 budget, a move that would bring down the government and hold up the pullout indefinitely.

"We are conducting a series of meetings with politicians and using our connections," Amrusy said.

March 31 is the deadline, but no final budget vote has been scheduled because Prime Minister Ariel Sharon hasn't been able to secure majority support in parliament.

Intifada against the PA legislature
A showdown with his own rebel lawmakers forced Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qureia to drastically reshuffle a proposed Cabinet after his original list of political old-timers touched off threats of a no-confidence vote.

Qureia told parliament he would largely appoint experts, rather than politicians, to the Cabinet, which is to be presented to parliament for approval Wednesday.

Legislator Hanan Ashrawi said parliament's rebellion marked a turning point for Palestinian politics. "The conclusion is that what people want are (ministers) who are capable, who are honest, who have credibility and who will do the work," she said.

The most prominent of the professional appointees is Finance Minister Salam Fayyad, an anti-corruption crusader who is widely respected by the international community and has held the job for three years.

Qureia's new Cabinet would likely include ex-general Nasser Yousef as interior minister in charge of the security forces. In the 1990s, Yousef led a crackdown on Islamic militants in Gaza and is widely seen as determined to push ahead with reforms of the security forces.

Also likely to make the new list is Palestinian U.N. envoy Nasser al-Kidwa, who is to replace Nabil Shaath as foreign minister, with Shaath moving to the post of deputy prime minister.


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