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"Any
Palestinian participating in this is, from a religious view,
committing a sin and his money is immoral," Sabri
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OCCUPIRD
JERUSALEM, November 26 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - The top
Palestinian Muslim official said Wednesday, November 26, that he had
issued a religious decree which would bar Muslims from working in any
capacity on the construction of Israel's West Bank controversial wall.
The
Grand Mufti
of Occupied Jerusalem, Ikeremah Sabri, told Agence France-Presse (AFP)
the barrier was being built on stolen land and therefore any financial
gain from its construction would be immoral.
"The
wall is built on stolen land and whatever is built on stolen land is
illegal and the participation of anyone in building this wall --
whether they are contractors or owners of heavy machinery -- should be
forbidden," he said.
"Any
Palestinian participating in this is, from a religious view,
committing a sin and his money is immoral."
The
issuing of the decree, or fatwa, comes after two Israeli watchmen
appointed to guard the separation barrier around occupied east
Jerusalem were shot dead on Saturday, November 22. One was an Arab
Israeli.
While
Israel claims the barrier is merely designed for security purposes,
Palestinians say that the fact that it cuts deep into their territory
is proof that it is an attempt to pre-empt their future borders.
The
mufti also
criticized the so-called Geneva Initiative, an alternative peace plan
drawn up by Palestinians and left-wing Israelis which is to be
unveiled in Switzerland on Monday, December 1.
The
agreement comes to a compromise on the right of return for
Palestinians who were either expelled or fled their homes after the
creation of Israel in 1948.
"We
insist on the right of refugees to return to their homeland -- the
land of their fathers and grandfathers," the mufti
said.
A
U.N. report underlined last September that the separation wall marked illegal
annexation of Palestinian territory and must be
condemned by the world community.
Under
the terms of the internationally-backed 'roadmap' for Middle East,
Israel is obliged to dismantle all outposts and place a complete
freeze on settlement activity.
Another
Peace Plan
Meanwhile,
Israel's main
opposition Labor party announced on Tuesday the main principles of its
own peace plan for the region.
The
plan, approved by Labor’s political committee, foresees the creation
of a Palestinian state and a return by Israel
to its 1967 borders, with the exception of "rectifications"
made for security reasons or to include Jewish settlements.
The
outline of Labour's plan coincided with the release by right-wing
Israeli settlers of another blueprint for the Middle East, which rules
out the creation of a Palestinian state or the dismantling of any of
their settlements.
Labor’s
plan says Occupied Jerusalem would be the capital of both the Israeli
and Palestinian states.
But
it says Israel
would keep sovereignty over eastern parts of the city occupied in 1967
and it rules out a right of return for Palestinian refugees and their
descendants, who number some four million today.
It
says if peace talks fail, there should be a "unilateral
separation" from the Palestinians and Israel
should continue building its highly controversial security barrier
through the West Bank, albeit ensuring its route encroached less than
it currently does on Palestinian land.
By
contrast the plan by right-wing Jewish settlers seeks to expand the
state of Israel to encompass the Palestinian territories occupied
since 1967, Israeli public radio said.
The
West Bank and Gaza Strip would be just two out of 10
"cantons", ensuring a Jewish majority in parliament, said
officials at Yesha council, the settlers' representative body.
With
figures indicating that the Palestinian population could outstrip the
Jewish population in little more than a decade, the canton arrangement
would guarantee a Jewish majority in parliament.
The
plan -- drawn up by settlers' leaders and right-wing members of
parliament, including some from Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's own
Likud party -- is one of the most serious warnings from the right
since Sharon established his government coalition in March 2001.
"The
prime minister must understand in time that if he expels Jews from
their houses, he will no longer have a majority in his government or
in parliament," Ben Tzvi Lieberman, a senior member of Yesha,
told Israeli radio.
Lieberman
said the right-wingers' plan was needed because both the roadmap and
the Geneva Initiative were "very bad solutions".
The
roadmap envisages the creation of a Palestinian state by 2005. The
Geneva Initiative, a project forged by left-wing Israeli politicians
and leading Palestinians, also foresees the creation of a Palestinian
state, with Israel
handing over some of its own land in exchange for existing settlements
being incorporated into Israeli borders.
But
the settlers' plan advocates "the eradication of terrorism, the
abandonment of the principle of peace in exchange for land, autonomous
administration for the Arabs and a final regional accord which would
exclude the creation of a Palestinian state or the dismantling of
settlements," Lieberman said.
Sharon,
who has said he is considering "unilateral" measures towards
the Palestinians, was reported on Tuesday to have received a tough
time at the hands of his own MPs when he tried to convince them that
there was no alternative to the land for peace principle.
While
Sharon has remained tight-lipped about what his "unilateral"
measures would involve, there have been widespread reports that it
would see the evacuation of settlements on the far side of Israel's
West Bank separation barrier or which were deemed difficult to defend.
Sharon's
policies in the occupied territories recently came under fire from US
President George W. Bush and his own top brass.
Bush
said in a speech last week that the "daily humiliations" of
Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank had to end and called for a
halt to all settlement activity in line with the terms of the roadmap.