Sharon postpones Gaza pullout by three weeks (Agencies) Updated: 2005-05-10 08:31
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said on Monday he would postpone Israel's
withdrawal from the Gaza Strip by three weeks, to mid-August, to avoid
conflicting with a traditional Jewish period of mourning.
The delay could give settlers and rightist supporters, now staging a protest
campaign, more time to organize their avowed resistance to Sharon's plan to
"disengage" from conflict with Palestinians in occupied territory they want for
a state.
Sharon, in an interview on Israel's Channel One television, said the Gaza
pullout would be launched "in consideration of the (mourning period), that is,
immediately after Tisha B'av, apparently the 15th, 16th or 17th of August."
 Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon speaks during a ceremony
marking the 60th anniversary of the allied victory over Nazi Germany, at a
museum at Latrun, Israel, Monday May 9, 2005. Earlier Monday Sharon told
Israeli media he plans to delay the planned Gaza pullout until
mid-August.[AP] | He declined to give an exact starting date but said he believed that once it
got under way, the evacuation of all 21 Jewish settlements in the Gaza Strip and
four of 120 in the West Bank would not take more than three weeks.
Last month, Sharon had mooted a possible delay, citing Jewish religious
sensibilities during the mourning spell that marks the destruction during
biblical times of two Jerusalem temples. The observance ends on Aug. 14.
Devout Jews do not move house during this period.
Asked about the postponement, Palestinian Vice Premier Nabil Shaath repeated
a call for Israel to seek a peace partnership with the Palestinian Authority
rather than pursue unilateral steps.
"Israel decided to withdraw from Gaza unilaterally and now it is putting it
off unilaterally ... If the peace process is going to proceed in this pattern,
there won't be a peace process," Shaath told Reuters.
Officials of the mediating "quartet" -- the United States, Russia, European
Union and United Nations -- meeting in Moscow urged Israel and the Palestinians
to coordinate the Gaza pullout to avoid chaos in the aftermath.
HAMAS MAKES STRONG SHOWING
Indications that Hamas militants could dominate Gaza after Israelis leave
strengthened on Monday with official results of municipal elections showing the
Islamist faction trounced the Fatah party of moderate President Mahmoud Abbas in
main towns.
The solid performance by Hamas, sworn to Israel's destruction but saying it
would adhere to a ceasefire for now, could presage the outcome of a
parliamentary election slated for July and problems for Abbas's agenda of peace
talks with Israel.
U.S.-led mediators count on the ceasefire and Gaza pullout to revive a "road
map" peace plan envisaging Palestinian statehood.
But the truce has been shaky, Sharon has said he will not hold talks on
Palestinian statehood until Abbas cracks down on militants and many of the 8,500
Gaza settlers have vowed to stay put, raising the specter of violence.
"The dates Sharon is playing with don't interest us in the least," said
Itamar Ben-Gvir, a settler leader, after the prime minister announced the delay.
"For all we care, he can set tomorrow as the day. We will not move from here."
While the postponement could encourage some rightists, it would also give
breathing space for complex preparations to relocate settlers that have been
bogged down in wrangling over suitable sites for new homes and compensation
terms.
"Disengagement" would mark Israel's first dismantling of settlements in
territory captured from Arab states in the 1967 Middle East war and where
Palestinians seek independence.
Palestinians want a viable state in all of Gaza and the West Bank. But while
Sharon wants out of Gaza, he says Israel will keep larger West Bank settlements
under any final peace deal.
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