Israel fears boycott over barrier

Published January 5, 2004

AL QUDS, Jan 4: A senior minister warned on Sunday that Israel risked an international boycott over its West Bank barrier similar to that faced by apartheid-era South Africa , as more settlement outposts were ordered to be evacuated.

"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," Justice Minister Tommy Lapid told Sunday's cabinet meeting, his spokesman Tzahi Moshe told AFP.

Lapid, who is also a deputy prime minister and leader of the centrist Shinui party, said the government should "have another look" at the route of the barrier which has attracted widespread international condemnation as it juts deep into Palestinian territory.

The UN General Assembly last month asked the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague to rule on the legal consequences of the barrier. Hearings are scheduled to begin on February 23.

Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's coalition government insists that the barrier, which it calls a "security fence", is essential to prevent attacks on Israeli 'territory' by Palestinian militants.

But the Palestinians see the montage of barbed wire fencing, trenches and concrete as an attempt to pre-empt the boundaries of any future two-state settlement and grab some of their most fertile land.

US President George W. Bush has said that the barrier is undermining confidence in the Middle East process and the internationally-drafted roadmap for peace.

The roadmap has stuttered to a halt in recent months amid accusations by both sides that each other is failing to meet their commitments. Under the terms of the blueprint, Israel is obliged to tear down all settlement outposts erected since Sharon came to power in March 2001 but only a handful have so far been removed.

Sharon ordered the evacuation of two more outposts on Sunday but settlers immediately accused their former champion of threatening "the future of Zionism".

The outposts at Tal Binyamin and Havat Maon join a list of four other West Bank outposts now slated to be dismantled in coming days, a source within Sharon's office told AFP.

Pinhas Wallerstein, a leading member of the Settlers' Council, said in a statement that settlers would fight "this policy of the government which is targeting the future of Zionism".

According to settler sources, seven families are currently living in Havat Maon even though it was originally dismantled by the army in 1999. Tal Binyamin is uninhabited.

The government on Sunday also granted permission to nearly 30,000 Palestinians living in the West Bank and Gaza Strip to work in Israel. The army announced similar moves in mid-December after Sharon pledged to ease the plight of Palestinians but a lockdown of the territories was imposed in the aftermath of a December 25 suicide attack near Tel Aviv.

Meanwhile, the funeral for a Palestinian teenager who died of his injuries after being shot during a funeral procession on Saturday held on Sunday. Around 400 people attended the service for 18-year-old Muhammed al-Masri who was the fourth Palestinian to be killed in three separate incidents in Nablus on Saturday.

The Israelis have been carrying out a lengthy operation in and around Nablus for some two weeks, hunting and arresting members of hardline Palestinian factions such as Hamas and the al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades.

Palestinian prime minister Ahmed Qorei condemned the international community's "silence" over events in Nablus. "Whenever the Palestinians carry out any attacks or operations against Israel they are condemned by the whole world but when Israel carries out attacks against our people, the international community stays silent," he told Voice of Palestine radio.-AFP

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