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A ray of hope in Middle East

Chris | 20.05.2003 14:09

The people of Gaza rise up and say no to attacks on Israel! This rare event is the most positive news for a long time.

Hundreds of Palestinians protest against Kassam shootings
(The Associated Press)

In a rare demonstration Tuesday, about 600 residents of northern Gaza's Beit Hanoun blocked a main road with trash cans, rocks and burning tires in a burst of anger at gunmen who have prompted Israeli incursions by firing rockets at Israeli targets.

The protest erupted some hours after the IDF pulled forces out of Beit Hanoun after a five-day incursion aimed at disrupting the Kassam rocket attacks.

"They claim they are heroes," said Mohammed Zaaneen, 30, a farmer, of the Palestiniain gunmen, as he carried rocks into the street. "They brought us only destruction and made us homeless. They used our farms, our houses and our children ... to hide."

During the IDF presence in Beit Hanoun, eight Palestinians were killed in clashes, our gunmen and four teens, ages 13, 15 and 17. Three of the teens had been throwing stones at Israeli tanks when they were shot by troops. Sixty-five residents were wounded, including 20 under the age of 15, doctors said.

The IDF troop pullback came despite a rash of suicide bomb attacks in Israel that have killed 12 people and wounded dozens in the past few days.

The pullback suggested Israel is holding off on large-scale retaliation for now, amid international concern that new strikes would further weaken the new Palestinian prime minister, Mahmoud Abbas.

Abbas is seen as instrumental in implementing the "road map" to peace plan, a three-stage prescription for ending violence and setting up a Palestinian state by 2005.

However, Abbas has said he will not launch a crackdown on militias, a crucial step in the first phase, until Prime Minister Ariel Sharon accepts the plan.

Chris

Comments

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protest against extremists

20.05.2003 15:35

They'll only be real hope when people start to protest against Hamas and Islamic Jihad etc.

pessimist


There is hope

20.05.2003 16:11

In the 20th century all occupation forces have eventually been defeated, only by keeping pressure on Israel will they leave the occupied territories.

Victory to the Intifada!

Paul


good news

20.05.2003 17:08

This is good news! Of course as the last comment points out keeping pressure on Israel is ncessary - everyone knows that already. But its important how and to what end liberation struggles are carried out. The people who protested against the gunmen are saying no to the kind of struggle enforced upon them by those carrying out the attacks which just cause them more misery. And it is the people who'll direct real change, not self-appointed armed vanguards borne of desperation and full of reactionary ideology. Lets be aware of the competing ideologies and class interests in Palestinian society as well as call for solidarity with the intifada.

el acrata


Maybe wrong problem, Paul

20.05.2003 22:20

Have you considered that the BIG problem isn't so much GETTING Israel out of the "territories" but in not having them come back in and we're right beack where we are now.

In other words, any "two state" solution WILL require actions of the Palestinians (assuming we get that far) to settle among themsleves whether or not there will be peace or an immediate war between Israel and the new Palestinian state.

Because IF there is no will among the majority (?) of the Palestinians to obstruct the attacks of those who WILL continue to attack Israel across the new border. If you think that won't happen you are naive. Now I am NOT saying that the Palestinians will have to succeed in completely halting these attacks, but they will need to be obviously making an all out effort to do so.

Have you considered the grim possibility that the only reason we have not yet had a solution is that it looks unworkable from the point of view of BOTH sides....
Israelis -- envision that they are going to be right back where they are right now.
Palestinians --- the civil war would be worse than what is happening right now.

Is what is reported "hopeful"? Well perhaps yes from the point of view of the Israelis. They might get to pull out. But from the point of view of the Palestinians I don't know. There may be no possible path that offers them peace. Reality may only be offering them the choice of fighting the Israelis or each other.

Mike
mail e-mail: stepbystepfarm@shaysnet.com


futility

21.05.2003 07:10

The only way to solve any problem is to understand the origin of the problem.
If palestinian and israeli workers joing together as an unity, I think you solve the actual conflict. Sharon and Arafat don't want that, otherwise there will be no more justification of the conflict.
It has nothing to do do with two states solution or any other solutions available. Israel will continue to take more palestinian land, and the palestinians are going to oppose that. For Israel is the distruction of Plaestinians and the stealing of their land. For palestinians is the distruction of Israel if they want to keep and live in their own land. The conflict is an economic conflict, is not ideoligical, political, religious, race or anything else. For one is the stealing for the other the survival.
Politicians are demented individuals, they don't give a damn about the people who are supposed to serve. Only the unity of the workers may solve once and for all the paelestinian and israeli conflict.

machno


Racist

22.05.2003 11:15

This is a racist conflict the zionists from before 1948 did not want to live in peace with the indigenous Palestinians. Their slogan of People with no land for a land with no people shows this. They tried to deny the existence of an indigenous people. This is the reason zionism is racist. Zionists do not want peace they want to dominate. The two state solution is not viable because zionists will seek to dominate any Palestinian state while the rest of the world turns a blind eye, just as it has done for the last 70+ years.

Paul