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Peace Now: Jewish Settlers Ready to Quit Gaza, West Bank

The main obstacle to removing illegal settlements is Sharon's government, says Peace Now

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM, July 24 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Most Jewish settlers in the occupied Palestinian territories would quit illegal Israeli settlements if the government ordered them out and offered financial compensation, the anti-settlement group Peace Now said in a study released Wednesday, July 24, 2002.

The survey found that 68% of settlers "recognize the authority of the democratic institutions of the country to decide on a withdrawal from the settlements and will conform to such a decision," Agency France Press (AFP) reported.

The survey, unprecedented in its scope and depth, was supervised by an academic committee of professors from Tel Aviv University and conducted by the Hopp Research company on 3,200 households, in every settlement numbering 150 inhabitants and in most of the smaller ones.

The Israeli group, which supports an Israeli withdrawal to the borders of 1967 when Israel seized lands from Palestine, Lebanon, Syria and Egypt, said that 6% would use illegal means to oppose the decision of their ouster, while 26% will obey such a decision following a struggle by legal means.

The survey was carried out in three "waves" on different dates between April and July 2002. According to Peace Now, the survey was based on a representative sample of about 3,200 households in the West Bank and Gaza Strip and a control group composed of some 800 control households located over the Green Line. A total of 4,000 phone surveys were done.

The survey, which was carried out over a period of three months, reveals that a 59% majority of Israeli settlers would choose financial compensation as their preferred option in case of withdrawal, while 10% would favor being relocated in Israel proper.

Only 9%would insist on remaining in their settlement, while 23% said they would choose to be relocated in another settlement in the Palestinian territories, the Peace Now survey said.

There are an estimated 200,000 settlers spread out over up to 200 illegal settlements, although accurate figures are not available. Another 200,000 Jews live in occupied then annexed east Jerusalem.

Jewish settlements, one of the root causes of the Palestinian Intifada against Israeli occupation in 2000, are considered illegal by the international community.

Extremist settler population presents a grave danger to Palestinians

  The U.N. Security Council has called on Israel to withdraw from the occupied territories it seized in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war in exchange for peace.

However, Peace Now stressed that the level of willingness to leave among the people surveyed suggests that settlements are not immovable and that the main obstacle to peace is hardline Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's government.

"The settlers, with the exception of a very small extremist minority, will not be an obstacle to a peace agreement," Peace Now said, adding that views expressed by the Council of Settlers were not representative.

Peace Now said that in the areas where it found the highest level of readiness to leave such as the southern Gaza Strip, the Jordan Valley and the northwestern West Bank, many only stayed for financial reasons, as they could find no buyers for their houses.

Professor Dan Jacobson of Tel Aviv University, who helped carry out the poll, said that while the number of houses being built in existing settlements was on the increase, the settler population was actually dropping.

Peace Now cited the example of the Adora settlement near the West Bank city of Al-Khalil (Hebron), where 80 percent of the population have left since the beginning of the Intifada and where an eight-room villa can be rented for just over 50 dollars a month.

The group urged the government to use the huge amounts of money poured into the settlements "for the purpose of fair compensation to the settlers in order to ensure their smooth transfer inside the state of Israel."

"Those people are caught in the settlements. Many of them want to leave, but there is no way for them to leave because nobody will buy their homes," said Professor Itzhak Schnell of Tel Aviv University.

"The minute there is a mechanism in place, it is clear the floodgates will open," Peace Now spokesman Didi Remez said.

History of Settlements

Illegal Israeli Jewish-only settlements have expanded across the West Bank, Gaza Strip and Jerusalem. By the end of 1967, there were just three settlements; by mid-1999 this had risen to 195, of which there were 18 in Gaza Strip and 177 in the West Bank (including Jerusalem).

The settler population is increasing at a faster rate than the Israeli population as a whole. According to the Israeli Central Bureau of statistics, it grew by 7.6% in 1998 in the West Bank and 12% in the Gaza Strip, compared to 2.3% in the Israeli population overall.

In 1999, the Israeli government confiscated 40,178 dunams of Palestinian land (1 dunam equals 1000 square meters). Of this, 19,691 was to be used for settlement expansion. Since 1967, 73% of the land in the West Bank and Gaza Strip has been confiscated by the Israeli government. The fact that Israel doesn't intend to return this land at the conclusion of any deal is demonstrated by the fact that Israel's structural plan for 2020 allows for 310,000 settlers in the West Bank.

The same pattern is replicated in Jerusalem. Since 1967, 15 settlements have been erected within East Jerusalem, occupying 24 square kilometers (34%) of East Jerusalem. The settler population in East Jerusalem alone is 180,000 (compared to 210,000 Palestinians living in the eastern part of the city).

The settler population is by and large an armed paramilitary group that presents a grave danger to the Palestinian population.

Palestinians are prohibited by Israel from building in approximately 60% of the West Bank, 40% of the Gaza Strip and 87% of Jerusalem. Since 1967, more than 6000 Palestinian homes have been demolished in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, and 2500 in East Jerusalem.

There has been an increase in the demolition of Palestinian homes since the beginning of the Oslo Accords: between then and April 1999, 946 homes were demolished. More than 60% of Palestinians in Jerusalem now live in a housing density of three or more persons per room – three times more crowded than Jewish houses in Jerusalem.

House demolition is one plank in an Israeli government strategy to ethnically cleanse Jerusalem of Palestinian residents. Another technique is the confiscation of Palestinian ID cards, which forces Palestinian residents to live outside the city. Between 1996 and 1999, more than 2200 Jerusalemite ID cards were confiscated.

Israel also refuses to implement Palestinian refugees' right of return. In 1948, with the colonization of the historic land of Palestine, around 750,000 Palestinians were evicted from their land. Four hundred and eighteen Palestinian villages were depopulated and destroyed.

Following the establishment of Israel, laws were passed denying Palestinians the right to return home and expropriating their homes and land. These laws are still in force.

The Absentees' Property Law of 1950 created a Custodian for Absentee Property, in which the legal and equitable title of “absentee” property was entirely divested. An absentee could reclaim their property only if they could prove that they had left their place of residence “for fear that the enemies of Israel might cause him harm”. The law thus excludes the majority of Palestinians who had fled in fear of attack from Israeli forces. An estimated 3.25 million dunams of land was expropriated under this legislation.

The constant denial by Israel of the right of return, and even responsibility for what remains the world's longest and largest refugee crisis, is critical to understanding Palestinians' anger at the so-called peace process.  

 

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