NEVE
DEKALIM, Gaza Strip, September 12 (IslamOnline.net & News
Agencies) – As the last Israeli soldier left the Gaza Strip early on
Monday, September 12, triumphant Palestinians celebrated the end of
38-year military presence, praying for full liberation of the Strip
with control over crossings and airspace.
Jubilant
Palestinians fired celebratory shots into the air as their red, green,
black and white national flag was raised in former Jewish settlements
and convoys of Israeli troops in tanks rolled across the border,
reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Gaza
divisional commander General Avi Kochavi, the last Israeli soldier,
exited Gaza at 6:50 am (0350 GMT) through the metal gates on the
Kissufim crossing where Israeli military bulldozers dug up mounds of
earth to block the entrance.
An
Israeli flag was then hoisted ahead of a formal ceremony to mark the
end of the Operation Last Watch, which took place under cover of
darkness.
Causing
last-minute acrimony, Israel decided to leave 24 synagogues intact
inside the impoverished Gaza Strip, one of the most densely inhabited
places on earth with a population of 1.3 million.
An
infuriated Palestinian leadership said it would demolish the
synagogues within hours of taking control of the evacuated areas.
Palestinian
security forces had overnight entered the 21 evacuated Jewish
settlements which had sprung up across Gaza since the territory was
captured by Israel from Egypt in the 1967 Middle East War.
The
army pullout follows Israel's evacuation of 9,000 Jewish settlers from
the Mediterranean strip of land and a corner of the West Bank, the
first such move since the 1967 war.
Victorious
Palestinians
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Palestinian women celebrate Israel's withdrawal.
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"I'm
so happy that I can't find the words to describe how I feel. I just
hope the West Bank will follow," said Palestinian Captain Abu
Mohammed.
In
the old unofficial Jewish settlement capital of Neve Dekalim, one
Palestinian security official was seen kissing the ground, his assault
rifle on the ground before him.
For
Palestinians, Neve Dekalim, the largest Jewish settlement in the Gaza
Strip, conjures up images of cold-blood killings and destruction as it
used to be a launch pad for deadly Israeli raids into the adjacent
city of Khan Yunis.
With
more than 108 Palestinians killed and up to 2500 homes demolished in
Israeli offensives launched from Neve Dekalim, the settlement of death
and destruction as called by the Palestinians is by no means a
misnomer.
A
flashpoint of defiance against the dismantle of Jewish settlements,
Neve Dekalim was constructed in 1982 on 600 donums of Palestinian land
usurped by Israeli occupation troops.
Joyful
Day
Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas hailed the Israeli army's departure a
"day of joy".
"We
have to say that this is a day of joy, the likes of which the
Palestinian people have not known for a century," Abbas told
journalists in Gaza City.
"We
are seeing soldiers, tanks and Israeli military vehicles leaving our
land and the Israeli flag lowered and replaced for always by the
Palestinian flag," said a jubilant Abbas.
"Much
work still needs to be done but nothing can take away from this
victory."
Still
Occupied
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"We have to say that this is a day of joy, the likes of which the Palestinian people have not known for a century," Abbas said. (Reuters)
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Despite
the celebrations and festivities, the Palestinians insist that even
after the departure of the last Israeli soldier, the territory will
remain occupied as Israel will retain control of land borders, air
space and territorial waters.
Describing
the pullback as "an important step", Abbas said the question
of border crossings, particularly in Rafah, must be resolved in order
to prevent the Gaza Strip "from turning into one giant
prison".
Last
week, Israel closed the Rafah border crossing to Egypt, Gaza's only
exit to the rest of the world, and plans to open a new crossing where
it can still monitor the passage of goods.
Although
Israel is leaving the Rafah terminal, it has insisted on maintaining
security control of all merchandise entering Gaza from Egypt.
"It
is time for this people to taste joy and to be done with sadness,
suffering and oppression which they have endured generation after
generation," Abbas said.
"This
is the result of the sacrifice of the martyrs and the prisoners."