{"id":207103,"date":"2003-07-31T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-03-12T19:18:55","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.un.org\/unispal\/?p=207103"},"modified":"2019-03-12T19:18:55","modified_gmt":"2019-03-12T19:18:55","slug":"auto-insert-207103","status":"publish","type":"document","link":"https:\/\/www.un.org\/unispal\/document\/auto-insert-207103\/","title":{"rendered":"Chronological Review of Events\/July 2003 – DPR review"},"content":{"rendered":"
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<\/p>\n
Division for Palestinian Rights<\/p><\/div>\n
Chronological Review of Events Relating to the M<\/span>ONTHLY MEDIA MONITORING REVIEW<\/span> <\/span><\/p><\/div>\n July 2003 <\/p><\/div>\n 1<\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n “We are seeking a political solution,” Secretary General Kofi Annan <\/span>said<\/a> during a visit to Switzerland. “And I think at the end I would want to see a situation where all these movements and groups are transformed into political parties to play a role in a democratic Palestine. I think that is the direction we should encourage them to go.” <\/span>(Reuters, UN News Service) <\/i><\/span><\/p><\/div>\n Defence Minister Shaul Mofaz confirmed that Israel would hand over Bethlehem to the Palestinian Authority on 2 July, but said details had to be worked out to ensure the security of the Israeli settlers nearby as well as access to a religious shrine. Foreign Minister Shalom said Israel would also pose conditions for further redeployments. “If they are determined to dismantle the infrastructure of terror organizations, to really confiscate weapons and stop incitement, we are willing to withdraw from more cities in Judea and Samaria [the West Bank],” Shalom told Reuters <\/i>TV. (Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Prime Ministers Sharon and Abbas met in Jerusalem to discuss the Road Map progress. In a joint news conference held before the meeting, Mr. Sharon <\/span>said <\/a>he would discuss with Mr. Abbas the next steps both sides would take. Mr. Abbas said he hoped they would agree on forming joint committees to further the Road Map’s implementation, while Mr. Sharon said: “We are before a new opportunity for the possibility for a better future for both peoples. A future full of opportunities and hope is today closer than in the past.” He also warned that despite the new-found hope, dangers still existed, pointing at militants “who would like to see the process explode,” and reiterated that his first priority was Israel’s security, on which he would make no compromises, emphasizing: “Israel will continue to fight terrorism until its absolute defeat.” Turning to the Palestinians, he said: “We do not want to rule you and dictate your destiny.” Mr. Abbas for his part called Israel’s withdrawal from the northern Gaza Strip “important steps” and said other reoccupied Palestinians towns and cities would be next.” Messrs. Abbas and Sharon ended their conference with a long handshake, looking into each other’s eyes. Both Prime Ministers came with a delegation of ministers, with Mr. Abbas accompanied by PA State Minister for Security Affairs Mohammed Dahlan, Palestinian Council speaker Ahmed Qurei, PA Foreign Minister Nabil Sha’ath and PA Finance Minister Salam Fayyad. The TV broadcast aired around the world showed members of the Israeli and Palestinian cabinets sitting together and chatting in an extraordinary scene after 33 months of fighting. “I have no doubt that the picture coming out of here today to the people of Israel and the Palestinian people and the entire world is one of hope and of optimism,” Mr. Sharon said in a live TV broadcast. <\/span>(DPA, The Jerusalem Post, Reuters) <\/i><\/span><\/p><\/div>\n Prime Minister Sharon said he would consider letting Chairman Arafat relocate from Ramallah to the Gaza Strip, but that there was no intention of restoring his freedom of movement. A senior Israeli official said it would be a “one-way ticket” [to Gaza] for Mr. Arafat. Although Mr. Arafat was now technically free to leave the mukataa <\/i>– his compound in Ramallah – the move would clear the way for Israel to arrest “wanted” Palestinians who had taken refuge there. He had also been effectively barred from travelling abroad as Israel could deny his return to the Occupied Palestinian Territory. (AFP, AP, The Jerusalem Post)<\/i> <\/p><\/div>\n Chairman Arafat said Palestinian security forces had arrested militants who had killed a Bulgarian roadworker in a West Bank shooting on 30 June in a violation of the ceasefire. (Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n An IDF spokesman said a Palestinian armed with a pistol had opened fire at a roadblock near Tulkarm and was shot dead by soldiers. There were no other casualties or any immediate claim of responsibility. (Reuters)<\/i> <\/p><\/div>\n The United States Administration was considering increasing aid to the Palestinians and, in a change of policy, providing its first direct assistance to the Palestinian Authority, The New York Times<\/i>reported. To date, US aid, totalling US$200 million so far in 2003, had been transmitted through the Âé¶¹APP and independent relief organizations. Citing unnamed Administration officials, the newspaper said the aid would go towards improving the Authority’s intelligence and security apparatus and easing living conditions in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. An initial expenditure of $300 million was being considered by the Central Intelligence Agency. (AFP)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said the European Union’s Italian Presidency considered Prime Minister Abbas its main contact within the PA for matters relating to the Middle East peace process and aimed to move towards a confirmation of Mr. Abbas’ legitimacy. “True strengthening of the Palestinian police, action to stamp out terrorism and an extraordinary commitment to sustaining a lasting ceasefire are today in the hands of Mr. Abbas,” he said, adding that Prime Minister Berlusconi had “no problem in meeting with Mr. Arafat.” (AFP)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n 2<\/strong><\/i> <\/p><\/div>\n Israel handed over control of Bethlehem to Palestinian police under a security pact supporting the Road Map. Israel would halt curfews and patrols, while armed Palestinian police would curb militants behind suicide bombings and other attacks. Israel would also be in charge of the security of Israelis, including those living in nearby settlements. Israeli tanks and troops continued to surround and restrict movement in and out of the city. Hanna Nasser, Mayor of Bethlehem, called it “a ceremonial withdrawal, not a real one.” (AP, The Guardian, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Following a meeting with Egyptian President Mubarak, Âé¶¹APP Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process Terje Rød-Larsen said: “We feel in the UN that the peace process has to be broadened to have all the tracks of the Middle East peace process, including Syria and Lebanon.” He commended Egypt for its role in mediating the three-month ceasefire and called on Israel and the Palestinians to refrain from any provocative actions. He warned that the ceasefire was still “very fragile” and could “easily collapse” if the parties did not act responsibly. (DPA)<\/i> <\/p><\/div>\n Italian Prime Minister Berlusconi said that as the European Union President, he would press for a wider Middle East peace conference, and again offered Sicily as the venue. He said: “Our presidency, along with the United States, the Russian Federation and the Âé¶¹APP, will work to support the Road Map so that we can work out a timetable and the means for the launching of an international peace conference.” Mr. Berlusconi had told European parliamentarians at an earlier meeting that the EU needed to build a relationship of greater trust with Israel but must also implement plans to reconstruct the Palestinian economy. (Ha’aretz, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n President Bush told reporters at the White House that he was “pleased” by the progress made by Palestinians and Israelis but warned that there were still groups committed to thwarting the peace process. (DPA)<\/i> <\/p><\/div>\n The United States started direct economic aid to the Palestinian Authority with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) transferring US$30 million for rebuilding the infrastructure in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. The money would be earmarked for repairing roads, waterworks and other infrastructure damaged by Israeli incursions. Some money would also go to private Palestinian enterprises that had lost millions of dollars during the frequent curfews and closures. During 2003, the Palestinian Authority was due to receive $124.5 million from USAID, while the State Department’s refugees bureau would provide Palestinians with $89 million through UNRWA. State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said: “The finances are under the stewardship of a new finance minister [Mr. Salam Fayyad] and now largely transparent and therefore accountable to the Palestinian people.” A sizable contribution to help Prime Minister Abbas rebuild the Palestinian security forces was also under consideration. (Ha’aretz, Reuters, The Guardian)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Jordanian Foreign Minister Marwan Muasher urged the Israeli Government to “completely stop” building settlements and a barrier separating Israel from the Occupied Palestinian Territory. In a meeting with the Israeli Prime Minister’s Bureau Chief Dov Weisglass and Political Adviser Shalon Turgeman, Mr. Muasher said: “We hope the security wall will become part of the past in the light of the new atmosphere.” (DPA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Jordan’s Royal Jerusalem Committee accused Prime Minister Sharon of attempting “to sabotage” the Road Map by allowing foreigners and Jews to enter the Al-Aqsa Mosque. The Committee’s Secretary-General Abdullah Kanan appealed “to the US Administration, President Bush, Secretary of State Colin Powell, the European Union and Russia to intervene so as to honour the promises they had made at the Aqaba Summit … by pressuring the Israeli Government to cancel this decision and abide by international legitimacy.” The initiative for the visits had come from Jerusalem Police Chief Michael Levy, who reportedly felt the end of the United States-led war in Iraq had produced a “change of atmosphere” in East Jerusalem. (AFP, DPA, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Spain offered to host a Middle East peace conference, with Foreign Minister Ana Palacio telling a news conference after a meeting with PA Foreign Minister Nabil Sha’ath: “For Spain, it would be a very great honour to host a conference… If such a decision is taken, we would facilitate it, by providing a venue for a conference.” Mr. Sha’ath said the PA would be “very happy and proud if the next peace conference were here in Madrid.” Ms. Palacio and Mr. Sha’ath signed an agreement under which Spain would provide €10 million (US$11.54 million) in aid to the Palestinians during 2003 to fund health, education and job creation. Some 80 vehicles were also expected to be shipped from Spain soon for the Palestinian police. Both Foreign Ministers commented on Palestinians given refuge in Spain in 2002 after an Israeli siege of Bethlehem’s Church of the Nativity, saying all three should at some point return to Bethlehem. (Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Three Israelis were slightly wounded late in the day when Palestinians fired three anti-tank rockets at the “Kfar Darom” settlement in the Gaza Strip. In response, the IDF closed the north-south highway to Palestinian traffic for several hours, with soldiers placing concrete blocks onto the road at the Abu Houli and Al-Matahen checkpoints in the central and southern Gaza Strip, trapping cars between the two. Three Palestinians were wounded when Israeli troops stationed in the “Gush Katif” settlement block further south opened fire on cars. The IDF said troops had fired in the air on two occasions when Palestinian vehicles had approached the roadblock, endangering the soldiers, and was not aware of any victims. Prime Minister Abbas condemned as “acts of sabotage” the firing of rockets at “Kfar Darom” and the shooting attack that had resulted in the death of a Bulgarian worker on 30 June. Mr. Abbas told reporters during a visit to Beit Hanoun that the PA rejected such acts. As Israel lodged its first formal protest against the ceasefire violation after the attack, PA State Minister for Security Affairs Mohammed Dahlan said the Palestinians were pursuing the cell responsible for the attack. (AFP, AP, DPA, IBA, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n 3<\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n During a raid in Qalqilya, Israeli troops wounded and arrested Ibrahim Yassin, the local leader of Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, and shot dead his aide, 30-year-old Muhammad Shawar. Israel Radio<\/i>said both men had been linked to a shooting attack on the "trans-Israel" highway in June, in which a seven-year-old girl was killed. The IDF said both men had been armed and that one was killed when he tried to flee. Palestinian sources said Mr. Shawar was only wounded in the leg, but when troops withdrew, he was found dead with gunshot wounds to the head. PA Minister of Information Nabil Amr condemned the killing, saying it could derail peace efforts, and promised to raise the “worrisome” matter with both Israel and the United States. A senior aide to Chairman Arafat, Tayeb Abdel Rahim, called the killing an “assassination” and accused Israel of trying “to bring us back to the cycle of action and reaction.” But PA Foreign Minister Nabil Sha’ath told reporters that the incident would not derail the peace process: “We have always known that the Road Map is not a highway. It is a mountainous, winding road with cliffhangers and sharp turns to the right and to the left and up and down.” (AFP, AP, DPA, IBA, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Following the handover of power to the Palestinian Authority in Bethlehem, Beit Jala and Beit Sahur on 2 July, Foreign Minister Shalom said if quiet prevailed there would be further West Bank troop redeployment. (IBA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Palestinian security forces in the Gaza Strip arrested two Palestinians from Khan Yunis suspected of firing anti-tank rockets at the “Gush Katif” settlement block the day before. Israel Radio <\/i>reported that one of the suspects was a Fatah member. (The Jerusalem Post) <\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Israel Army Radio<\/i>said 12 Palestinian prisoners would be released later in the day, in additio to the nine freed the night before. Among those already released was Col. Suleiman Abu Mutlak, a Preventive Security Service chief for Khan Yunis and surroundings who had been arrested by Israel on 5 May and held as an administrative detainee. Israeli Public Radio <\/i>had earlier reported that Col. Mutlak would be freed as a goodwill gesture following a meeting between Prime Ministers Sharon and Abbas on 1 July. Prime Minister Abbas warned that the ceasefire would collapse unless Israel released an unrestricted number of prisoners, while PA Minister of Prisoner Affairs Hisham Abdel Razek said: “There can be no peace with Palestinian prisoners still in Israeli jails.” Human rights activist Mustafa Barghouti said: “The people will not settle for anything short of the release of every single prisoner. But the Israelis, it seems, are only considering the release of the administrative detainees. The gap is huge. It won’t be bridged without huge US pressure.” Kol Yisrael <\/i>reported that 4,500 Palestinians were being currently held in army detention centres, 1,000 of them administrative detainees, while Deutsche Presse Agentur<\/i>put the number of Palestinians held by Israel at more than 5,000, about 3,000 of them in Israeli prisons and the rest with the IDF. According to the B'Tselem human rights organization, 952 were administrative detainees, jailed by military order without charge or trial. (AFP, AP, DPA, IBA)<\/i> <\/p><\/div>\n Âé¶¹APP Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process Terje Rød-Larsen said while in Cairo that he hoped the 1,000 days of violence were over and called the ceasefire and Israeli pullouts in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank the first important steps in the Road Map implementation. Mr. Larsen also said that eventually the Palestinian Authority must confiscate weapons. (IBA)<\/i> <\/p><\/div>\n The Jerusalem Post<\/i>reported that senior Israeli Government officials had indicated in recent meetings that Israel would be prepared to allow the Orient House to resume its activities if certain conditions were met. The reopening of closed Palestinian institutions in Jerusalem was one of the demands listed in the Road Map. “We are very optimistic that Orient House would be allowed to reopen in the near future,” a senior PA official told the paper. (The Jerusalem Post)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Israel’s High Court of Justice rejected a petition by residents of the “Beit El East” settlement outpost and granted the IDF permission to remove the settlement, Israel Radio<\/i>reported. The court rejected the petition on the grounds that Palestinians privately owned the land. “You have only been there two weeks and already you want to claim rights to the land from the time of Abraham,” Justice Mishael Heshin told the petitioners, who withdrew the petition to avoid court fees. (The Jerusalem Post)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n 4<\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Prime Minister Abbas held talks with Islamic Jihad leaders. Mohammad al-Hindi of the Islamic Jihad said the talks were “positive and serious” and that “we insisted on the liberation of Palestinian prisoners from the occupier’s jails, which is a priority for the Palestinians.” He added, “We discussed with Abu Mazen [Mahmoud Abbas] the Israeli violations we consider very serious,” referring to the killing of an Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade leader the day before in the West Bank. (AFP)<\/i> <\/p><\/div>\n President Bush called Prime Minister Abbas and praised him for progress on the Road Map, saying he hoped to celebrate Palestinian independence in 2005, according to a statement from Mr. Abbas’ office. (AP)<\/i> <\/p><\/div>\n 5 <\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n A Palestinian man, Majdi Abu Shaluf, 22, was killed and another was injured in an unexplained explosion to the east of Khan Yunis, according to hospital and security sources in the Gaza Strip. A Palestinian security spokesman later said, “Shaluf was killed by an explosive device left behind by the Israeli army.” The IDF stated in an interview that no shots had been fired by their troops in the area. (AFP)<\/i> <\/p><\/div>\n Prime Minister Abbas met with Hamas spiritual leader Shiekh Ahmad Yassin. Palestinian Authority Minister of Information Nabil Amr said: “Abbas made a courtesy visit to Yassin and the unofficial talks between them focused on the issue of prisoners. The visit took place in a positive and cordial atmosphere, and the two men exchanged views on the Palestinian scene.” Palestinian sources said that Mr. Abbas had asked Sheikh Yassin for his support towards a conciliatory approach on the prisoner issue. (AFP) <\/i><\/p><\/div>\n 6<\/strong><\/i> <\/p><\/div>\n Israeli authorities charged 11 Israeli paramilitary border policemen with committing acts of violence and looting against Palestinians in Hebron. The criminal charges were the latest in a series brought against members of a border police company that had patrolled Hebron for the past three years, and included the thrashing of a Palestinian in Hebron caught outside during curfew and the theft of money and goods from local shopkeepers. To date the IDF has issued 34 indictments against soldiers for excessive violence and looting; human rights groups said that much of the abuse went unpunished. (Reuters; see also 18 April 2003)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n The Israeli Cabinet agreed by 13 votes to 9 on the release of some 350 Palestinian prisoners. The releases would be carried out on the basis of a list drawn up by the General Security Service (Shin Bet). The Cabinet laid down criteria for the releases, including stipulations that none of the detainees should have “blood on their hands” or belong to “terrorist organizations.” The decision excluded members of militant groups like Hamas and the Islamic Jihad and Palestinians who had carried out attacks against Israelis. Israeli Prime Minister Sharon said: “The releases would be carried out in tightly supervised, small and measured doses in relation to proven Palestinian actions in the security sphere; in other words, if terror continues and there is no genuine Palestinians effort to fight and eliminate it, the releases will stop.” About 6,000 Palestinians were being held in Israeli jails for security – as well as non-security-related offences. (AFP, AP, Ha’aretz, The Washington Post)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Palestinian Authority Minister of State for Internal Security Dahlan expressed his disappointment in the limited number of prisoners to be released and rejected the criteria set by the Israeli Cabinet for their release. According to an Israeli official, most of the prisoners who would be released had been detained without trial, had only a few months to serve, were either under 18 or over 60, or were women. In a meeting with Israeli Defence Minister Mofaz in Jerusalem, Mr. Dahlan asked for an opportunity to appear before a ministerial committee set up to deal with prisoner release to present the Palestinian position. PA Information Minister Nabil Amr said the PA would “continue working for the release of all prisoners regardless of their political affiliations.” (AFP, AP, DPA, Ha’aretz)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n The Palestinian Popular Resistance Committee, an umbrella organization of various factions based in Gaza, announced its commitment to the three-month truce in a communiqué, which included conditions that Israel should release all Palestinian political prisoners and end all forms of military operations, raids, and assassination operations. It also demanded that Israel lift the siege imposed on Chairman Arafat. (DPA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Palestinian security forces intercepted five Palestinians, including three armed men, as they approached the Israeli border. They were taken into custody in Gaza. Israeli Major-General Amos Gilad told Israel <\/i>Army Radio<\/i>: “The Palestinian Authority has begun dealing with the arrest of those planning terrorism.” (Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Saudi Arabia donated US$1.8 million to UNRWA, bringing the total Saudi contribution to the Agency to $60 million. Saudi Arabia had also launched a project to renovate and construct more than 2,500 homes in collaboration with UNRWA, said Karen Koning AbuZayd, the Agency’s Deputy Commissioner-General. In a <\/span>statement<\/a> released in Amman on 6 July, Ms. AbuZayd said UNRWA had received two checks – one for $1.2 million and the other for $600,000. The former was Saudi Arabia’s regular contribution to the Agency, and the latter was part of a $2.4 million contribution Saudi Arabia had announced in 2000 it would pay to UNRWA over four years. “This will help to relieve the suffering of nearly 4 million Palestinian refugees,” she was quoted as saying by <\/span>Arab News<\/i><\/span>. <\/span>(<\/i><\/span>Saudi Press Agency<\/i><\/a>, <\/i><\/span>UNRWA press release J\/04\/2003<\/i><\/a>)<\/i><\/span><\/p><\/div>\n 7<\/strong><\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Hamas leader Abdul Aziz al-Rantissi stated in an interview: “If Israel does not release all Palestinian prisoners during the three-month hudna [ceasefire], all Palestinian groups, including Hamas, will consider themselves out of the truce and not committed to it.” (DPA) <\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Hassan Khamaisseh, leader of the armed wing of the Islamic Jihad, was arrested by Israeli troops in a dawn operation at Qabatiya, near Jenin. Sheikh Bassam Saadi stated in an interview: “If the raids continue, Jihad will stop respecting the truce.” An Israeli security source said that the arrest was targeted against “a cell involved in the manufacture and planting of explosive devices.” (AFP) <\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Israeli troops backed by some 20 armoured vehicles raided the village of Tubas in the West Bank in a bid to arrest Ammad Daraghmeh, local leader of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades. Mr. Daraghmeh was not caught, but troops arrested his mother. (AFP)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n In a meeting with Palestinian Authority Minister of Prisoner Affairs Hisham Abdel Razek, Israeli Justice Minister Yosef Lapid rejected Palestinian demands that Israel release members of Hamas and the Islamic Jihad, dismissing the call as “impractical” in the light of the recent declaration by Hamas that it would continue its fight against Israel once the three-month truce was over. Mr. Abdel Razek said: “We in the Palestinian Government are responsible for the entire Palestinian nation and we are not a government of one Palestinian party.” PA Justice Minister Abdul Karim Abu Saleh, who was also at the meeting, said the talks included the renewal of judicial relations between Israel and the PA, in an effort to rehabilitate the Palestinian judiciary. The three also discussed the possibility of Mr. Abbas’ and some of his Cabinet ministers meeting Mr. Lapid’s Shinui faction in the Knesset to discuss the prisoner release. PA Information Minister Nabil Amr said the Palestinians proposed that Mr. Abbas and Minister of State for Security Affairs Mohammed Dahlan meet with Knesset members, and that both Mr. Abbas and Chairman Arafat supported the idea. No date, however, had been set and the Palestinian leaders would not be official guests of the Knesset but private guests of Mr. Lapid, Knesset spokesman Giora Pordes said. (<\/i>Albawaba.com<\/u><\/i>, AP, DPA, Ha’aretz)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Palestinian Authority Minister of External Affairs Nabil Sha’ath called on Israel to leave the remaining West Bank cities by the end of August 2003 and added that the Palestinians would then prepare to hold presidential and parliamentary elections. “We can conduct elections by October. We have told all the parties that Israel should conclude its withdrawal from Palestinian cities within six weeks.” Mr. Sha’ath said Chairman Arafat would be the candidate for President from the Fatah movement since the other major factions had been boycotting elections. Palestinian legislator Hanan Ashrawi said that Mr. Sha’ath’s timetable was too optimistic. (AP)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n At talks between the EU and Mediterranean States, an agreement was reached between the EU and mostly Arab Mediterranean States that Italy (currently holding the EU Presidency), Israel and the PA would set up a three-way committee to promote contacts between businessmen with a view to launching joint ventures in their countries. PA Economic Minister Maher Al-Masri said, “We believe that by enhancing the business process we can give a helping hand to the peace process.” (Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n In the evening, a suicide bomber blew himself up, levelling a house in Kfar Yavetz, a moshav in central Israel near the West Bank, and killing the 65-year-old woman who lived there. Israeli police said the woman was apparently watching television when the bomb went off, causing the roof to collapse. The dead woman’s three grandchildren were slightly wounded in the blast. The blast had initially been blamed on a gas leak but police confirmed the following morning that it had been caused by a bomb, fragments of which had been found at the scene. Police spokesman Gil Kleiman added that it seemed likely that the attacker had been planning an attack on another target but the device had exploded prematurely. A leaflet with the Islamic Jihad logo faxed to news agencies claimed responsibility for the attack and threatened more violence, saying: “Release the prisoners or the consequences will be grave.” The leaflet identified the bomber as 22-year-old Ahmed Yehyia from the village of Kafr Ra’i south-west of Jenin. The Islamic Jihad’s political leader in the West Bank, Sheikh Bassam Sa’adi, said Jenin-based militants had probably staged the attack in reaction to Israel’s decision not to release prisoners affiliated with the group. But he stressed that “Islamic Jihad … is committed to the truce and it remains so today.” The Islamic Jihad’s top spokesman in Gaza, Nafez Azzam, also distanced the group from the claim, saying: “We have no knowledge about the claim of responsibility … and are still committed to this initiative and the truce … We stand by our word and our commitments.” Foreign Minister Shalom said Israel was still committed to the truce and that peace efforts would continue despite the bombing. “We have an opportunity now that we must not miss, which we have to check out thoroughly and see if it is really genuine,” he told Israel Army Radio<\/i>. “Today was an attack … not a huge attack. Tomorrow the same gang will stage an attack with 20 dead and the process will end at that moment.” Ra’anan Gissin, a spokesman for Prime Minister Sharon, said the fact that factions within the Islamic Jihad did not accept the ceasefire showed that the ceasefire “was not worth the paper it is written on, unless it is accompanied by real actions … against the Islamic Jihad and Hamas.” (AFP, AP, DPA, Ha’aretz, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n A grenade attack was launched against Israeli troops manning a border position with Egypt near Rafah, without causing injury, an IDF spokesman said. But a Palestinian security source said that the troops accompanying bulldozers were not attacked until after they had moved about 100 metres into Palestinian territory, and that two Palestinians were wounded after Israelis had fired on them in the wake of the attack. The Israelis said they had been in a sector under Israeli control and had only opened fire in self-defence, wounding one Palestinian in the leg. (AFP)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Palestinians said they had detained and later released to her family an 18-year-old woman planning a suicide bombing in Israel. A Palestinian Authority security spokesman said forces had begun searching for the woman after she left a note with her family announcing her intention to carry out a suicide bombing in Israel. (Ha’aretz, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Palestinian Authority Minister of Information Nabil Amr met with Israeli Foreign Minister Shalom to discuss the issue of incitement. Mr. Shalom said steps were being taken to oversee Palestinian written and electronic media as well as school textbooks, to ensure they were free of inflamatory messages. The two also agreed on the creation of a joint committee to examine ways to end incitement to violence. The Israel Broadcasting Authority<\/i>reported that the first meeting of the committee had taken place in Jerusalem with Messrs. Shalom and Amr attending the meeting and speaking to the press afterwards. (DPA, Ha’aretz, IBA, Middle East Online)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n 8<\/strong><\/i> <\/p><\/div>\n Israel is considering releasing a small number of Hamas and Islamic Jihad members as part of the planned release of Palestinian prisoners that was supposed to take place after the meeting between Prime Ministers Sharon and Abbas initially scheduled for 9 July. Israel Radio <\/i>reported that Israel had said that it would consider changing the criteria for release if the United States agreed to release Jonathan Pollard and Egypt agreed to release suspected spy Azzam Azzam. One of the recommendations of the General Security Service (Shin Bet) in compiling its list of some 350 candidates for release was that members of rejectionist organizations, principally Hamas, the Islamic Jihad, and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, were excluded from consideration for release. (Ha’aretz, The Jerusalem Post)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Prime Minister Abbas told reporters that a planned meeting with Prime Minister Sharon had been delayed “for technical reasons” and denied any serious differences with Fatah's Central Committee. Mr. Abbas had reportedly submitted his resignation from the body in protest at their verbal assaults on his performance. A Palestinian Authority spokesman said Mr. Abbas had postponed the meeting for several days because the Palestinians needed more time for internal debate arising from what he termed the lack of tangible results the Palestinians had so far seen under the Road Map. “This Israeli failure to make progress on the release of prisoners and the withdrawal has created very heated internal discussions. Therefore this demands more time for internal consultations to decide on what to do,” Deputy Information Minister Ahmed Subuh said, adding that Palestinians in Bethlehem, for example, felt no improvement in their lives, despite the Israeli withdrawal the previous week, as the siege on the city had become even tighter. (AP, DPA, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n In the Gaza Strip, the IDF proceeded with steps to open more roads. Another road linking Gaza and Rafah was expected to be opened to traffic, while preparations continued to open a road near the “Morag” settlement, which had been closed to Palestinian traffic for two years. A Kol Yisrael <\/i>reporter said “Morag” residents had been demonstrating against the move. (IBA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Reserve General Uzi Dayan, chairman of the Public Council for Israel’s Security Wall, proposed that communities not protected by a security wall build their own. (IBA)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n Israel’s High Court of Justice refused to issue an interim injunction prohibiting the Government’s policy of targeted assassinations on “ticking bombs” until an overall case against targeted killings had been judged. The judges gave the Government 60 days to present a written response to the petition, which had ben filed in January 2002 by the Palestinian Society for the Protection of Human Rights and the Environment (LAW) and the Public Committee against Torture in Israel (PCATI). During the three-hour hearing, petitioning attorney Avigdor Feldman argued that although the law allowed for the use of “special means” against “ticking bombs,” or Palestinians on the verge of carrying out an attack, it was unacceptable to build a policy on such a basis. “Every assassination is irreversible and does not help the situation,” he said. State Attorney Shai Nitzan, representing the IDF, argued that the matter was not for the courts, since they could not intervene in military affairs or examine operational military matters. The attorney further argued that the “pinpoint prevention” referred to by the army was legitimate, according to international laws of war, since it was an act of self-defence. Those laws allowed harming, during combat, someone positively identified as conducting lethal attacks against Israeli targets. (AFP, Ha’aretz)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n The High Court of Justice also rejected a petition to broaden an earlier injunction which prohibited the IDF from using Palestinian civilians as human shields or hostages. The petition had been filed in May 2002 by Adalah, the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, on behalf of seven NGOs, including B’Tselem, Physicians for Human Rights, PCATI, LAW and the Centre for the Defence of the Individual. After a 19-year-old Palestinian was killed while forced by the IDF to be a human shield, Adalah had requested the Court to issue a temporary injunction against the practice, and the court had complied in August 2002. The injunction was challenged by the Government and broadened in January 2003 to include a new “prior warning” order, which allowed the army to use Palestinians as “assistance” if they agreed to it during the course of an arrest operation. The current petition sought to overturn the “prior warning” clause on grounds that its use did not relieve the army of its responsibility to protect rather than exploit civilians during military operations. Adalah's attorney Marwan Dalal argued that under international law, it was forbidden to put any civilian into a dangerous military situation, even if he\/she was a friend or relative of the person wanted for arrest. But State Attorney Nitzan argued that the use of civilians was justified to prevent loss of life and that under international law, the use of the “prior warning order” permitted a civilian to enter a dangerous situation if he agreed to it. “There are people who, for all sorts of reasons, would certainly accept,” Mr. Nitzan said, citing Israel’s policy of destroying the homes of wanted militants or those who had carried out attacks. “When someone knows you are going to destroy his house with a bulldozer they say: we’ll go in and get them out, don’t destroy our house,” he said. (AFP, Ha’aretz)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n In a letter to Palestinian Authority President Arafat, Prime Minister Abbas offered to resign from the Fatah Central Committee. The resignation was unanimously rejected by the Central Committee. In a separate letter to the Committee, Mr. Abbas challenged it to outline a different policy towards Israel, stating: “If you decide that your way of managing negotiations is better, I’ll also resign from the Government.” The resignation offer followed a meeting of the Palestinian leadership in Ramallah late on 7 July, at which Mr. Abbas came under fire over his negotiations with Israel, especially on the issue of prisoner releases. A statement obtained by Agence France-Presse<\/i>indicated that the Ramallah meeting had concluded that all Palestinian prisoners, some 6,000 detainees, must be released unconditionally following the agreement on the hudna<\/i>by Palestinian groups. (AFP, AP, Ha’aretz, Reuters) <\/i><\/p><\/div>\n The United States reaffirmed its support for Prime Minister Abbas after the Fatah Central Committee had rejected his resignation. “Our position is that we stand behind Prime Minister Abbas,” said State Department spokesman Philip Reeker. “What we have seen under his leadership is … constructive change…, empowerment for Palestinian governing institutions taking place, and his efforts to end terror and violence have presented a real opportunity to move forward,” Mr. Reeker said. (AFP)<\/i> <\/p><\/div>\n After consultation with Congress, Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage signed a waiver of congressional restrictions barring direct United States aid to the Palestinian Authority. Administration and congressional sources said the first installment of US$20 million would be announced in the coming days and would be used to improve basic services in Palestinian areas being vacated by Israeli forces. (AP, DPA, Reuters)<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n United States envoy John Wolf, heading the American team expected soon to begin independent checks on the ground of the Road Map's implementation, met with Foreign Minister Shalom in Jerusalem and urged Israel to release more Palestinian prisoners and dismantle more settlements. (AFP)<\/i> <\/p><\/div>\n IDF <\/span>announced<\/a>
\nQuestion of Palestine<\/i><\/p><\/div>\n