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A
general view shows a concrete wall, part of the controversial
Israeli wall
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OCCUPIED
JERUSALEM, January 5 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – A
senior Israeli government Minister Sunday, January 4, warned his
country risked the danger of an expected international community
boycott over its separation wall similar to that faced by South Africa
during the apartheid era.
Israeli
Justice Minister, Tommy Lapid, called the Israeli government in the
Sunday cabinet meeting to "have another look" to reconsider
the wall which attracted 'widespread international condemnation' as it
cuts deep inside the occupied Palestinian territories, Agence
France-Presse (AFP) reported.
"There
is a danger that we will be exposed to an international boycott as was
the case before the fall of the regime in South Africa," Lapid
told the meeting, his spokesman Tzahi Moshe told AFP.
Lapid
added that Israel is exposed to U.N. sanctions over the
widely-criticized wall that cuts the Palestinian territories and harm
the population and peace process, Reuters cited the Israel Radio as
reporting.
At
the end of 2003, the U.N. General Assembly referred the controversial
separation wall, to the International Court of Justice (ICJ)
in The Hague in December 8, which is expected to begin hearings on
February 23.
According
to the Arab-backed resolution, passed by 90 votes to eight with 74
abstentions, ICJ would be asked to rule on the 'legal consequences' of
the barrier "which Israel, the occupying power, is constructing
in occupied Palestinian territory".
The
decision came few days after France's Foreign Minister Dominique de
Villepin said that the European Union was
mulling the possibility of bringing Israel's West Bank
separation wall to the International Court of Justice (ICJ).
Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said in a keynote speech last month that
construction would be accelerated despite the chorus of condemnation.
Earlier
in November, the Israeli Prime Minister vowed
to complete the wall opposing any peace initiatives claiming it is
important for the their security.
"We
are speeding up the construction of the fence and we will not stop, it
is vital for the security of the state and it is our
responsibility," Sharon said.
U.S.
President George W. Bush has said the wall is undermining confidence
in the Middle East process and the internationally-drafted roadmap for
peace, describing it as "a
problem" obstructing the creation of a Palestinian
state.
In
September, 2003, a U.N.
report underlined that the separation wall marked illegal
annexation of Palestinian territory and must be condemned by the world
community.
Lapid
is leader of the centrist Shinui party, the second largest member of
the Israeli coalition cabinet after Sharon's own Likud party.
Israel
Jails Five Soldiers
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Three
of the five in military court
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On
the other hand, the five Israeli soldiers who refused to serve in what
they called "an army of occupation", protesting the
occupation of the Palestinian territories were jailed for a year by
the military court verdict Sunday, the Israeli Ha’aretz daily
reported.
The
sentence, the first of its kind since the Palestinian Intifada began
three years ago, sent Haggai Matar, Amir Kaminer, Shomri
Zameret, Adam Maor and Noam Bahat, to jail last month by the
Jaffa Military Court.
"Every
day troops commit crimes in the occupied territories," one of the
five men, Haggai Matar, told reporters at the court, referring to
Israeli military actions in Palestinian territories, Los Angeles
Times reported.
"While
we go to the stockade, they remain free," he added.
By
leaving the court, the five said that their sentence would not deter
the refusenik movement and expressed their wonder at how soldiers who
carry out "war crimes" are given 'lenient sentences' while
they are sent to prison for matters on conscience.
The
sentence, however, was regarded as a warning to others by the recent
wave of the refusenik movement, Ha’aretz added referring to
the ruling of the judges.
Hadash
MK Mohammed Barakeh called the sentence a "draconian
punishment," adding that the refuseniks are a "conscientious
beacon for a violent society."
A
military prosecutor said the five had been found guilty of gross
insubordination after refusing to report for three years' military
service in 2002.
Two
weeks ago, 13 members of the Israeli army's most elite commando unit
publicly refused
to serve in the occupied Palestinian territories, saying the
army's operations there are as oppressive as immoral.
The
commandos refusal came three months after 27 reserve and active duty
airmen signed
a letter last September addressed to Sharon, refusing to
carry out "immoral and illegal" raids on Palestinian
civilians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
The
Israeli government harshly reacted to the September letter, which said
occupation of Palestinian territories was eating at the moral fabric
of the state of Israel. Some of the signatories were dismissed
after refusing to retract their statements.
The
"refusenik" movement swung into the spotlight in January
2002, when 52 reserve officers and soldiers signed a letter saying
they would not serve in the Palestinian territories.