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Hundreds Of Palestinians, Activists Protest Israel's Wall

A protester holding a sign reading "Occupation=Terror" during the rally (AFP)

JENIN, West Bank, November 9 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - As the world marks the 14th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, hundreds of Palestinians joined by Israeli and foreign peace activists demonstrated Sunday, November 9, in several West Bank cities and villages against Israel's separation wall, just one day after several thousand people marched through central Rome to protest against the controversial barrier.

In the village of Zabuba, at the northernmost tip of the West Bank, some 600 people staged a protest and a group of foreign activists from the International Solidarity Movement (ISM) cut a hole in the fence, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

An AFP correspondent said one of the barrier's gates was torn down before Israeli troops broke up the protestors by firing shots in the air as well as teargas and sound bombs.

Some 200 people also marched in the streets of the northern West Bank city of Tulkarem and continued their protest in the nearby village of Jubara, but were prevented by the army from reaching the fence.

Jubara is a tiny village which has been cut off from all shops and schools by the barrier and now sits isolated between the fence and the Green Line dividing Israel and the West Bank.

Around 300 people also held a protest in the northern town of Qalqilya, one of the most affected by the barrier.

They all shouted slogans against the "apartheid wall" and held banners which read: "Stop the wall" and "Wall against peace."

Several hundred Israelis and Palestinians demonstrated Saturday, November 8, in Sawaheh, a Palestinian town east of al-Quds (occupied Jerusalem), against the wall.

The protest was arranged by the peace groups Tayush and Gush Shalom.

Rome March

Palestinian protestors write anti-Israeli slogans on the Israeli wall (AFP)

Several thousand people already marched through the streets of Rome on Saturday, November 8, shouting slogans such as: "No to the Apartheid Wall in Palestine!"

Organizers said that more than 30,000 took part in the "Stop the Wall" march and rally, whose speakers included Fadwa Barghuti, the wife of jailed Palestinian leader Marwan Barghuti, and an Israeli peace activist, Michal Schwarz, from the Israeli movement for democratic action.

Many of the demonstrators, who included members of the Italian Communist Party, the Greens and labor unions, waved Palestinian flags as the march wound through the centre of the city.

Some symbolically tore down a cardboard wall as police moved in briefly to remove a banner erected along the march route by Jewish youths which said "With Israel for peace, now and always."

A smaller demonstration involving Israeli and Palestinian peace groups was held in the business capital Milan.

Also represented were the parties of Italy's centre-left opposition and the country's main labor unions.

In Naples, police said around 100 people took part in a similar demonstration which was followed by a concert.

The 600km-long wall will cut occupied Jerusalem off from the rest of the West Bank.

It will eventually snake some 900 kilometers (540 miles) along the West Bank and leave even larger swathes of its fertile territory on the Israeli side and could cost up to $2.2 million a kilometer or a total of $1.8 billion.

The first phase of the barrier was completed in July 2003 in the northern West Bank, but further construction has been delayed by differences between Israel and Washington over the wall's route.

The Palestinian Authority fears the real aim of the wall is to dictate the borders of its promised state.

Last month, the U.N. General Assembly overwhelmingly passed a resolution, demanding Tel Aviv to "stop and reserve" the construction of its separation wall.

Palestinians Died

Italians symbolically push a cardboard for the wall (AFP)

Meanwhile, two Palestinians, one of them a young boy, who were wounded during recent Israeli army operations in the West Bank, died of their wounds on Sunday, Palestinian medical sources said.

Ahmad Marai, seven, sustained serious head injuries in the northern West Bank refugee camp of Jenin Saturday when Israeli soldiers clashed with Palestinian fighters, the sources said.

Earlier, 24-year-old Samir Abu Assab, who suffered serious leg wounds Thursday, November 6, during clashes in Balata refugee camp in the northern West Bank city of Nablus, died in an occupied Jerusalem hospital, the sources said.

A Palestinian teenager was killed by Israeli fire in the village of Birkin Saturday morning in the second fatal clash of the day around this northern West Bank town, Palestinian security sources and medics said.

Mowataz Amudi, 15, died and two other Palestinians were wounded as stones were being hurled at Israeli troops, the sources said.

The deaths bring to 3,605 the number of people killed since the September 2000 outbreak of the Palestinian Intifada against Israeli occupation, including 2,690 Palestinians and 849 Israelis, according to an AFP toll.

24-Member Cabinet

On the political landscape, Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qorei announced Sunday that negotiations on a new government had concluded and that the 24-minister line-up would be submitted to parliament for a confidence vote Wednesday, November 12.

"We have now finalized a line-up for the next government and I will ask the head of the Palestinian Legislative Council to hold a special vote of confidence on Wednesday," Qorei told reporters here.

A major hurdle to the much delayed formation of a new Palestinian government was cleared Friday, November 7, when Qorei accepted Arafat's choice for the key post of interior minister.

The premier's preferred candidate, General Nasr Yussef, was dropped to make way for close Arafat associate Hakam Balaawi.

It had been suggested that Yussef might take one of four deputy prime minister posts but Qorei announced that he had "declined to take any position in this government".

Qorei, who spoke after a meeting with the powerful Fatah central committee, said the new line-up would be made up of 24 ministers, including the seven members of his outgoing "emergency cabinet".

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