Israel, Palestinians Agree on Gaza-Bethlehem Plan

Israel, Palestinians Agree on Gaza-Bethlehem Plan
HIGHLIGHTS: If Implemented, Agreement Could Pave Way For Ceasefire Ending 22 Months of Intifadha||Implementation Begins Monday||Agreement Makes No Specific Reference to Military Withdrawal But Occupation Army Speaks of More Talks at Lower Military Level||Hamas Slams Agreement But Says it Would Never Allow Palestinian National Unity Be Broken||Israeli Crackdown on Resistance Activists Continues||U.N. to Assess Humanitarian Problems Under Israeli Occupation|| STORY: Israel and the Palestinians agreed in high-level security talks on Sunday to launch a plan to ease an Israeli occupation army clampdown in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank city of Bethlehem, the Israeli Defense Ministry said.

If implemented, the agreement could pave the way for a cease-fire to end more than 22 months of violence in a Palestinian uprising in which more than 2,000 people have died. Previous efforts to end the violence with similar initiatives have failed due to Palestinian Resistance bombings and Israeli military strikes against Resistance leaders.

"The importance of the initiative is that it will build trust for both sides essential to any future security and diplomatic steps," said Israeli Defense Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, who earlier said the aim was to achieve a cease-fire.

Ben-Eliezer sealed the deal in four hours of talks with a Palestinian delegation headed by Interior Minister Abdal Razzak al-Yahya and Yasser Arafat's security adviser, Mohammed Dahlan.

"Both sides agree to start implementing the initiative tomorrow in Gaza and Bethlehem," the Defense Ministry said in a statement, adding the Palestinians would "take responsibility to calm the security situation and reduce violence and terror."

"The Defense Minister agreed that Israel for its part would do everything in order to ease conditions on the Palestinian population especially for civilians and in the humanitarian area at this time," it said. The statement made no specific reference to military withdrawal, which Palestinians had demanded as part of any bargain calling for their security services to crack down on Resistance groups targeting Israelis.

But the ministry said the sides also agreed to a new round of security talks by lower-ranking military officers in the West Bank and Gaza in the next few days.

ISRAEL AGREES TO ADD AT LEAST ONE WEST BANK TOWN TO ORIGIONAL 'GAZA FIRST' PLAN

In response to a wave of Resistance bombings, Israeli troops two months ago reoccupied West Bank cities that were handed to Palestinian rule under interim peace accords in 1994-95.

The occupation army also tightened its grip on the Gaza Strip. Sunday's talks were the first since August 7, when top security officials of the two sides failed to agree on Ben-Eliezer's plan to relax the army's grip in Gaza as a test case before doing the same in West Bank cities.

Palestinian security officials had demanded at least one West Bank city be included in the pilot plan.

In a turnaround on Sunday before the talks, Ben-Eliezer said he was willing to consider expanding what he calls the "Gaza first" proposal to West Bank cities.

"The main idea is to achieve a cease-fire and for tensions and all the violence to abate," Ben-Eliezer told reporters at a meeting with senior U.N. humanitarian envoy Catherine Bertini.

Television coverage of the start of the talks in a Tel Aviv hotel provided the first pictures of senior Israeli and Palestinian officials meeting for months. Most recent meetings have been held in strict secrecy.

HAMAS SLAMS 'GAZA FIRST' PROPOSAL AS ISRAELI ATTEMPT TO WRECK 'INTIFADHA', UPRISING AGAINST OCCUPATION

The Resistane Hamas group blasted Israel's intention to begin implementing the "Gaza First" security plan as a cynical plot to "destroy the resistance", a Hamas spokesman told AFP.

"Hamas and the Palestinian people reject any agreement which aims at destroying our resistance and ending the intifada (Palestinian uprising), which is what this agreement is aimed at," Gaza-based Hamas official Ismail Haniya told AFP by phone.

Haniya vowed Hamas would keep fighting as long as Israel continued its occupation of Palestinian territory.Asked whether he feared the Gaza First plan would provoke a crack-down on Hamas activists by Palestinian security forces, Haniya answered only that Hamas would never allow Palestinian national unity to be broken.

ISRAELI CRACKDOWN ON PALESTINIAN ACTIVISTS CONTINUE

Pressing on with operations against Palestinian activists, the Israeli occupation army on Sunday detained 16 suspects in Gaza and the West Bank cities of Ramallah and Qalqilya.

Israel's Supreme Court issued a temporary injunction at the request of seven human rights groups to stop the use of Palestinian civilians as "human shields." The injunction was issued pending a response by the state within seven days.

The petition arose out of last week's death of a 19-year-old Palestinian who was forced by Israeli occupation troops to knock on the door of a wanted Resistance leader. The Palestinian died in a hail of bullets.

U.N. TO ASSESS HUMANITARIAN PROBLEMS UNDER ISRAELI BLOCKADES & CURFEWS

U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan sent Bertini, an ex-head of the World Food Programme, to the region to assess Palestinian humanitarian problems under Israeli blockades and curfews. Last week, she had talks with Arafat in his compound in Ramallah, which is hemmed in by Israeli troops.

World Bank figures show half of the more than three million Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip live in poverty on 2 U.S. dollars a day. Aid agencies say malnutrition is rising.

PHOTO CAPTION

Israeli Defense Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer (L) holds security talks with Palestinian Interior Minister Abdel Razzak al-Yahya, (R) and President Yasser Arafat's security advisor Mohammed Dahlan (2-R), on August 18, 2002 about a plan to withdraw Israeli troops in the Gaza Strip and possibly part of the West Bank. Ben-Eliezer was joined at a Tel Aviv hotel by a group of senior military officers including Major-General Doron Almog (2-L), the head of the southern command. (Havakuk Levison/Reuters)

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