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Jan. 2: The first non-Arab passenger flight into Gaza arrives with
125 Russian tourists and trade delegates aboard. The Russian airline will
operate one flight every two weeks from Moscow to Gaza.
- The PA says it wants Israel to pay compensation for the damage it has
done to the Palestinian environment over past years.
Jan. 3: Israelis, Palestinians reach an agreement to carry out
the delayed transfer of another 5% of West Bank territory to the PA within
48 hours and 6.1% more by 20th Jan. The transfer was originally due on
15 Nov. 1999.
- Israeli settlers uproot 500 guava saplings hours after they are planted
in Al-Mawasi near Khan Younis.
- At a rally Jewish settlers from the Golan and the West Bank agree on
the anti-withdrawal slogan 'Evacuation of communities splits the people.'
- PM Barak names full normalization, demilitarizing the Golan and securing
water resources as his conditions for peace with Syria.
- Pres. Arafat orders the release of the banker Issam Abu Issa, the former
Gen.-Dir. of the Palestine International Bank, and his brother Issa, after
it has been agreed that a neutral auditing company review the bank accounts
and discuss the findings with a committee formed by Pres. Arafat.
- An attack by the Lebanese army on some 'fundamentalist' villages in
north Lebanon leaves 21 people dead.
- Sectarian confrontations in Egypt leave 20 people dead and 45 injured,
as well as many stores destroyed.
- PA police restore calm after armed men from Amari RC march through Ramallah
while youths burn tires, demanding the release of a prisoner serving a
life sentence for killing a Palestinian from Ramallah five years ago.
Jan. 4: A halachic ruling issued by prominent rabbis declares the
Golan Heights a part of the Land of Israel and "forbid[s] dismantling
communities in the Land of Israel."
- Israeli extremist group, 'Friends of Baruch Goldstein' desecrate the
tomb of Sheikh Izz Eddin Al-Qassam near Haifa.
- The Lebanese army kills a Palestinian who attacks the Russian Embassy
to become a martyr for the cause of Chechnya; the Palestinian leadership
condemns the attack.
- Sheikh Tantawi of Al-Azhar makes his first visit to Gaza.
Jan. 5: PA Presidential Sec. Tayeb Abdul Rahim states that this year the
independent Palestinian state will be established on all lands occupied
in 1967, with Jerusalem as its capital.
- In Bethlehem, Pres. Arafat receives Romanian Pres. Emil Konstantensco.
Jan. 5-6: As part of stage two of the Sharm Esh-Sheikh redeployments,
Israel transfers 2% of the West Bank from Area B to Area A status, and
3% from Area C to Area B.
Jan. 6: The last two signatories of the 'Petition of the 20', Ahmed
Shaker Dudin and Abdel Sattar Qassem, are released from prison where they
have been held since 28/29 Nov. 1999.
- Pres. Arafat receives former Russian Pres. Boris Yeltsin in Bethlehem.
Jan. 7: Eid Al-Fitr starts in Palestine, Saudi Arabia and Jordan;
in Egypt tomorrow.
Jan. 9: Talking to reporters in Gaza, Pres. Arafat says the Palestinian
people are determined to declare the establishment of the independent
Palestinian state with Al-Quds Ash-Sharif as its capital in the first
year of the third millennium.
- London's Sunday Times reports that the Mossad has managed to get a urine
sample of Syrian Pres. Assad that suggests that his health is deteriorating.
Jan. 10: An official final status talks session is held in Ramallah.
- Some 100,000 to 250,000 Israelis demonstrate at Tel Aviv's Rabin Square
against a possible withdrawal from the Golan.
Jan. 11: Negotiators Sa'eb Erekat and Oded Eran meet in Jerusalem
to discuss implementation of interim phase commitments.
- Israeli authorities say the age of Palestinian singles eligible to get
a work permit to enter the Green Line will be reduced from 25 to 21 years.
- Pres. Arafat signs a decree to establish the 'Palestinian Higher Development
Council', headed by himself and consisting of Mohammed Zuhdi Nashashibi,
Nabil Sha'ath, Maher Masri, Khaled Salam, to promote investment in the
PA, to control PA financial matters and become the only body authorized
to collect government revenues and transfer them to the PA treasury. Representatives
of donor countries and assistance organizations applaud the move.
- In Hebron, Israeli army sets up roadblocks around Al-Haram Al-Ibrahimi
and prevents many Palestinians from praying.
Jan. 12: The official announcement of Pope John Paul II's visit
the Holy Land from 20-26 March 2000 is made simultaneously in Rome and
Jerusalem.
- Israeli authorities issue 15 military orders to evict Palestinian families
living in caves near Sa'ir, Samu', Surif and Yatta in the Hebron area.
- In Aboud near Ramallah, Israeli bulldozers uproot 30 olive trees in
order to establish an Israeli military zone.
- Near Nablus, Israeli bulldozers destroy 100 dunums of Yasuf village
to make room for a bypass road.
- 61 Israeli MKs sign a draft resolution - initiated by MK Yossi Katz
- rejecting the right of return for Palestinian refugees and stipulating
that any govt. decision to return any Palestinian refugee requires the
support of 80 MKs.
- The Israeli army launches 11 air raids against Hizbullah positions in
South Lebanon.
- The Turkish Govt. decides to suspend the execution of the death sentence
against Kurdish leader Ocalan.
Jan. 13: The Israeli army puts up a military tent on Shallala St.
near Bet Hadassah in the center of Hebron.
- Settlers vandalize 600 dunums of fertile land in the village of Jaloud
near Nablus and destroy the winter crops.
- The Lebanese army arrests the Fateh officials Ali Mazhour and Taysir
Qadouri on a weapons charge but Fateh says the arrests are part of a campaign
to weaken Arafat's influence among the refugees in Lebanon.
- Near Nablus, Israeli settlers cut down hundreds of olive trees belonging
to Mohammed Abdullah of Deir Ballut in an attempt to seize land to expand
the settlement.
Jan. 14: Palestinian detainee Lafi Ar-Rajabi, 20, dies while in
Israeli custody after being tortured.
- Protected by Israeli troops, settlers from Eli Zahaf, uproot 200 olive
trees in Deir Ballout near Salfit.
Jan. 15: According to the Annual Report 1999 of the Palestinian
Human Rights Monitoring Group, over 300 political prisoners are detained
in PA jails, 250 of these for over one year without any charge or trial.
- The Palestinian Communications Min. cuts the contacts between Palestinian
'Jawwal' mobile phones and Israeli cellular phones due to trade problems
between the two sides as Israel refuses to deal with reciprocity.
- Former CG in Jerusalem Edward Abington says he will work as advisor
to the PA through a US consulting firm that has signed a $2.5 million
contract with the PA to arrange for Palestinian officials to meet in the
US Congress and advise the PA on how to deal with Congress and the Clinton
administration.
Jan. 16: Israeli authorities announce the confiscation of large
parcels of land in the district of Salfit to construct a by-pass road
for settlers.
- Israeli authorities seize Hebron's oldest mosque Mashhad Al-Arba'in
located near Tel Rumeida settlement for "military purposes."
Jan. 17: A bomb explosion at Hadera market injures 26 Israelis;
in Beirut, a group calling itself the "Omar Al-Mukhtar Forces" claims
responsibility.
- PA police extradites Hisham Fuad Nijem from Nablus to Israel - a youth
accused of participating in the murder of a child in Nazareth six months
ago; this is the first case where a Palestinian citizen is handed over
to the Israeli side.
- Armed settlers vandalize hundreds of beehives in Badhan and Fara'a villages
north of Nablus.
Jan. 19: The Israeli Higher Court looks into the cases of seven
Arab women from inside the Green Line who have had their Israeli citizenship
revoked by the Israeli Interior Min. after they married in PA areas.
- Syria holds the Israeli Govt. responsible for obstructing negotiations
after it demands, and Israel rejects presenting a written pledge on withdrawal
from the Golan.
- On his way to Washington, Pres. Arafat stops in Cairo to discuss with
Pres. Mubarak the recent developments in the peace process.
Jan. 20: King Abdullah II of Jordan confirms that the Palestinian
cause is the core of the Middle East conflict and states that there is
no way to establish peace in the region without returning Palestinian
rights and establishing the Palestinian State.
- After Israeli researcher Teddy Katz reveals the details of a massacre
committed by Israeli troops against the residents of the Palestinian village
of Tantura on 22 May 1948, Israeli Arab MKs demand the formation of an
inquiry commission.
- Lutfi Rujaby, 20, dies after being tortured by Israeli police in Ariel
settlement near Salfit.
- Settlers from Karni Shomron settlement uproot 200 citrus trees in Wadi
Qana near Salfit.
- The Israeli Govt. approves ten settlement schemes in the Bethlehem district.
Jan. 22: Islamic Jihad leader Ramadan Shallah states that it will
continue fighting against Israel until Palestinians have regained their
rights and lands.
Jan. 23: Pres. Arafat visits Tunis to brief Pres. Zein Al-Abeddin
Ben Ali on the peace process.
- In an interview with AFP, PLC Speaker Ahmed Qrei'a accuses Israel of
not being serious in the negotiations, saying, "the Israelis are not serious;
if they continue in this manner, we will make no progress."
- The Israel army uproot 50 olive trees in Kufr Qaddoum west of Nablus.
Jan. 24: In Brussels, Pres. Arafat demands from EU officials a
strong EU role in the Middle East and stresses that the Palestinian right
to self-determination and a state cannot remain a hostage to the difficulties
and stalemates of the peace process.
- Settlers from Dolev poison 80 beehives in Beit Sira near Ramallah, and
another 30 two days later.
- PNGO welcomes Pres. Arafat's ratification of the Law for Charitable
Societies and NGOs in Palestine.
Jan. 25: Returning from a tour of the US, Tunis, Cairo and Brussels,
Pres. Arafat says that the year 2000 will be the year of declaring the
Palestinian state.
Jan. 26: New US Amb. Martin Indyk presents his credentials to Pres.
Weizman (he is to be suspended in Sept. for alleged security lapses).
Jan. 28: Israeli troops raid the Muslim shrine of Nabi Musa near
Jericho.
Jan. 30: Palestinian and Israeli negotiators - headed by Yasser
Abed Rabbo and Oded Eran - start marathon talks near Jerusalem with the
aim of reaching a framework agreement for a final peace treaty under US
mediation. Eran presents Israel's security requirements as the basis for
the annexation of parts of the WBGS, incl. a security strip in the Jordan
Valley, Greater Jerusalem, certain settlements, and a security corridor
around settlements.
- As of today, Jawwal cellular phones are operating on the GSM system
in Palestine allowing customers to be reached in Jordan, Switzerland,
the UK, Norway, France, Turkey, Greece, Australia, Hong Kong and Israel.
An agreement between Paltel and the Israeli Orange Company on the operation
of Palestinian Jawwal phones inside Israel becomes effective.
- The Palestinian People's Party demands a general referendum to ratify
agreements.
Jan. 31: Pres. Arafat addresses the World Economic Forum in Davos,
presenting the Palestinian perspective on how to develop national independence
and support the Palestinian economy.
- In Moscow, multilateral talks resume after a three-year freeze to reactivate
the committees on refugees, water, environment, security, armament and
economic cooperation. The meeting is attended by a Palestinian delegation,
headed by Faisal Husseini, an Israeli delegation, headed by FM David Levy,
some other Arab delegations (Syria and Lebanon boycott), an EU delegation
and US Sec. of State Albright.
- Three Israeli soldiers are killed in South Lebanon.
Feb. 1: Israel presents a final status map to the Palestinians
offering 55-60% of the West Bank and calling for annexation of the remaining
40%.
- Public transportation in Ramallah goes on strike as taxi drivers protest
a governor's decree that they must collect passengers from a new station
in the city center, for the use of which they must pay NIS 304.
Feb. 2: In an interview with the Saudi Al-Madina newspaper, Arafat
says that when it comes to negotiations Barak and Netanyahu are no different
and that the only 'flexibility' of Barak was in speech, not on the ground.
- Barak's govt. approves redeployment maps focusing on the Hebron area
and excluding Abu Dis; the PA says it has not been consulted and will
not accept unilateral decisions.
- Referring to recent university votes, PLC member and Fateh leader Marwan
Bargouthi says the PA is responsible if Fateh losses in elections because
of the practices of the security apparatuses for which the public blame
Fateh.
Feb. 2-3: The PLO Central Council (PCC) convenes in Gaza, presided
over by Pres. Arafat, to discuss the declaration of the Palestinian State,
the peace process and other issues of national importance. Hamas, Islamic
Jihad, PFLP-GC and Sa'iqa boycott the meeting. The concluding statement
read by PNC Speaker Salim Zanoun announces that it has been decided to
declare the independent Palestinian state with Al-Quds as its capital
this year, stressing that this is a natural right of the Palestinian people
and the realization of the 1988 Declaration of Independence. Also emphasized
is the right of return for Palestinian refugees and that Israeli withdrawal
must include all Palestinian territories, incl. Jerusalem.
Feb. 3: PA Presidential Sec. Tayeb Abdul Rahim announces that the
PA rejects the maps Israel suggested for the final status, which left
lands occupied in 1967 in Israeli hands.
- The summit held at Beit Hanoun crossing between Pres. Arafat and PM
Barak fails to achieve any progress. Arafat leaves the meeting angry after
Barak refuses to discuss the final-status but instead tries to impose
the maps envisioned by Israel.
- UN Gen.-Sec. Kofi Anan says that there will be "no peace without improving
the social and economic conditions of Palestinians", warning of the potential
impact of expanding settlements.
- The PLC passes the draft Law of the Independence of the Judiciary.
Feb. 4: Yerushalim reports that settler leaders have organized
a meeting of the forum on 'Greater Jerusalem' and sent a letter to Barak,
demanding that Israel maintain security control in the Arab villages in
and around Jerusalem and not transfer them to the PA.
Feb. 5: In Amman, Yasser Abed Rabbo, Saeb Erekat and Mohammed Dahlan
meet with Jordanian FM Abdullah Khatib to brief him on the current crisis
in the peace process.
Feb. 6: The Committee on Displaced Palestinians - PA Min. Nabil
Sha'ath, FM Abdullah Khatib, FM Amer Musa and FM David Levy - meets in
Cairo to discuss the return of Palestinians who were forced to leave their
home during the War of 1967. Israel reportedly accepts the return of 350,000
displaced Palestinians, while the Palestinians demand the return of 850,000.
- In South Lebanon, one Israeli soldier is killed and seven others injured
in clashes with Hizbullah.
- During the murder hearing and sentencing of Ibrahim and Nidal Obeiad
in Bethlehem court, a mob of relatives and supporters attacks the court
and judges, demanding that the sentence be withdrawn. In protest over
the assault, the judges and members of the prosecution in the West Bank
declare a three-day strike starting the next day.
Feb. 7: The PA releases Hamas' Dr. Abdul Aziz Rantisi, after 21
months of detention in Gaza.
- During the night Israel conducts heavy air raids on Lebanese power stations
and Hizbullah sites.
- After Israeli forces brutally raid their family house in Israeli-controlled
Zone H1 in Hebron, Fatima Abu Rmeileh, 62, suffers a fatal heart attack.
- PALTEL sales manager Mufid Said Qaffaf says that Jawwal currently has
18,500 subscribers.
- In an interview with Al-Quds, Chief of Palestinian police Ghazi Jabali
says that the Palestinian state will be declared not later than August
2000.
- Adviser to Pres. Mubarak, Usama Baz says that Egypt will not allow its
NGOs to be transformed into a Trojan Horse for foreign interests.
Feb. 7-8: Israel continues its bombing campaign in Lebanon, leaving
at least 18 civilians injured.
Feb. 8: After destroying power stations in Lebanon, Israel declares
a state of emergency in the north and continues air raids on a communications
center and Hizbullah posts. The Israeli aggression is internationally
condemned. Egypt's FM Musa says Israel has put the peace process "in front
of a question mark".
Feb. 8-12: The Assembly of Catholic Ordinaries of the Holy Land
convene in Bethlehem to discuss a common pastoral plan, but also focus
on Jerusalem, saying that "Jerusalem has a unique, permanent, doctrinal
importance with deep roots for our Christian Arab and Palestinian thinking.
It is not possible or acceptable for us to give up our established rights."
Feb. 9: Pres. Arafat and several PA officials visit the Court of
First Instance in Bethlehem to express support. Afterwards, Chief of the
Court Judge Farid Misleh declares the end of the judges' strike.
- The Israeli State Comptroller's report on Shin Bet practices during
the Intifada - written in 1995 but kept secret - is publicized, revealing
that interrogators used torture on a scale beyond the 1987 Landau Commission's
recommendations.
- The PA Negotiations Dept. reveals the number of settlement tenders since
Barak took office to have reached 4,112.
- In an interview with Ad-Dustour King Abdullah II states that he does
not have in his lexicon a term called "resettlement" and that the main
goal now is the establishment of a Palestinian state.
- The Arab League calls on the international community to pressure Israel
to stop its aggression on Lebanon.
Feb. 10: The PA joins the call of the UAE's Sheikh Zayed Ben Sultan
for an Arab summit to discuss the negotiations with Israel and the aggression
in Lebanon.
- Responding to Israeli FM Levy's comment on burning Lebanon, Ismat Abdul
Majid, Gen.-Sec. of the Arab League, says the Israelis will be the ones
that will be burnt and not Lebanon and calls for freezing normalization
with Israel.
- In Bethlehem, Pres. Arafat receives the Romanian Pres., officially visiting
the Palestinian territories.
- After Jordanian hotels refuse hosting a ceremony marking the establishment
of Israel, the Israeli embassy considers filing an official complaint.
Feb. 13: Pres. Arafat arrives in Morocco as part of an Arab-European
tour aimed at explaining the Palestinian perspective on the current deadlock
in the peace talks.
- The Palestinian Central Council passes a resolution that statehood will
become a reality by Sept. 2000.
Feb. 14: PA Chairman Arafat states that he will declare Palestinian
statehood no later than Sept. 2000, with or without Israel's blessings.
- The PA bans entry of Israeli goods into its territory, incl. mineral
and soda water, biscuits, chocolate, home appliances, raw and manufactured
aluminum and electrical appliances.
- A 5-year old girl is raped in Nablus while she was on her way home from
school.
- The Palestinian High Court of Justice orders the release of several
Gazans imprisoned by the PA security forces, without due legal process
since Feb. 1999.
- At the meeting of the governing board of Beit Al-Mal Al-Quds (Jerusalem
Fund) in Morocco, Pres. Arafat calls on Muslims to donate funds to "Save
Arab East Jerusalem from cancerous Judaization by Israel."
- Called by the Higher Coordinating Committee of Teachers, a strike begins
to protest the PA's dismissal of their demands to increase their teaching
salaries that have decreased in recent years by a rate of 30-40%.
Feb. 15: PM Barak meets with Atty Gen. Elyakim Rubinstein, Justice
Min. Yossi Beilin, and GSS officials to discuss the Atty Gen.'s proposal
that the existence of 'extenuating circumstances' can acquit a GSS interrogator
from criminal liability as a result of employing torture against a detainee.
- In Rome, Pope John Paul II and PA Chairman Arafat sign a Vatican-PA
agreement aiming to ensure the Catholic Church's legal status in the PA
territories. Israel is angered by the event as the document relates to
the PA as though it were a sovereign state.
- Peace Now reports that it has calculated on the basis of satellite photos
that only a small percentage of land (78,786 dunums) seized for Israeli
settlement purposes is actually being utilized. The widest unused plots
of land are identified in Ma'ale Adumim.
Feb. 16: In Amman, Pres. Arafat briefs King Abdullah on developments
in the peace process and the PLO-Vatican Agreement. The king reiterates
his support for the Palestinian struggle until they regain their legitimate
rights on their national soil, including the establishment of the independent
Palestinian state with Al-Quds Ash-Sharif as its capital.
- Chief negotiator Saeb Erekat says that Israel tries to evade its commitments
to the peace process.
- Egypt's FM Amro Musa blames Israel for the serious deterioration in
the peace process and says it should stop to fool all the people all the
time.
Feb. 17: Thousands of Palestinians march in Nablus demanding the
death penalty for Bilal Abdul Rahim Shaqqo who is accused of raping a
5-year old girl in the Old City of Nablus four days ago. He is sentenced
to life imprisonment with hard labor.
Feb. 18: Dr. Abdel Sattar Qassem is rearrested in Nablus on orders
issued by the President and Head of Civil Police. While his lawyers are
barred from access, it remains unclear whether he will be charged and
if so-with what.
- Pres. Arafat reiterates that this year will see the proclamation of
the Palestinian independent state with Jerusalem as its capital.
- German Pres. Johannes Rau starts his official visit to Palestine.
- Parliamentary elections are held in Iran. Two days later results show
that the reformists win the majority of seats.
Feb. 19: Holding talks with German Pres. Rau in Bethlehem, Pres.
Arafat states it is clear that that the Sharm Esh Sheikh Agreement expires
on 13 Sept. 2000, and that Palestinians have the right to declare a state
afterwards. Arafat also expresses hope for a more effective role by Germany
and the EU in pressuring Israel to honor and implement signed agreements.
- At a seminar held in Gaza on Palestinian-Jordanian relations, Adnan
Abu Odeh, advisor to King Abdullah II, says that Jordan and Palestine
are a twin born from one womb but fate has chosen to bring a foreign body
(Israel) between them.
- The World Council of Churches demands the lifting of the sanctions against
Iraq.
- PA police closes down Nawras TV station in Hebron for one week for "incitement"
and "endangering Palestinian national interests," referring to the airing
of interviews with striking teachers who blamed the PA regime for "impoverishing
and humiliating the teachers."
Feb. 20: Israeli Min. of Trade and Industry Ran Cohen, says 25%
of his budget is spent in West Bank settlements, although settlers comprise
only 2.5% of Israel's population.
- YESHA Council says the settler population in the WBGS grew (excl. East
Jerusalem) grew by 12.5% in 1999.
- Speaker of the EU Parliament Nicole Fontaine starts her tour to Palestine,
Israel, Jordan and Lebanon.
- The PA rejects the final status maps prepared by Israel, incl. dismantling
21 settlements.
- In Lebanon's Ein Al-Hilwe RC hundreds of Palestinians demonstrate against
the US support to Israel.
- Pres. Arafat prohibits any reduction of the life sentence with hard
labor against child rapist Bilal Shaqqo from Nablus and orders the municipality
to take care of the victim child.
- Representatives from Israel, Egypt, Jordan and the PA meet in Tel Aviv
to discuss the destiny of Palestinians displaced in 1967.
Feb. 21: Yedioth Ahronoth reports that official data from the Construction
and Housing Min. reveals that construction is presently starting on 7,120
housing units. In comparison, during former PM Netanyahu's term in office,
construction started on only 5,400 housing units. In addition, since assuming
office, the Ministry has issued tenders for 3,196 new settler housing
units (2,500 of these in the 'Greater Jerusalem' area)
- Under the patronage of Pres. Arafat, the German Pres. Rau sets the cornerstone
for the German funded Jenin industrial zone. Rau also inaugurates a waste
water treatment plant in Al-Bireh, built by Germany.
- Eight Iranians including an 8-year old child are killed in violence
that erupts after the results of the parliamentary elections in Iran are
announced.
- The Israeli army raids Qalandia RC and breaks into several houses.
- The first meeting of the Higher Development Council decides to reinforce
privatization programs, to transfer the Personnel Dept.'s Salaries Directorate
in Gaza to the Finance Min., and to commission Nabil Sha'ath to be in
charge of the loans files.
Feb. 22: The PA Min. of Education dismisses 23 teachers who took
part in the recent strike and transfers others to schools in remote areas.
Yet, many teachers continue their strike.
- Israeli forces order the employees of Khan Younis Municipality to stop
building a public park in the city, because the site is close to Neve
Dekalim settlement.
- US special envoy Dennis Ross meets with Pres. Arafat in Ramallah as
part of an attempt to revive stalled talks.
Feb. 23: Pres. Arafat discusses with the Pres. of the EU parliament,
Nicole Fontaine, the EU role needed to overcome the crisis in the peace
process and bilateral relations. Fontaine stresses that the EU has not
changed its policy concerning Jerusalem and still considers it an occupied
city.
- Israeli FM Levy delivers a particularly violent and threatening Knesset
speech threatening to attack Lebanese civilians and specifically children.
- Hundreds of intellectuals, politicians and PLC members sign a new petition
calling on the PLO/PA to withdraw from the negotiations and saying that
the way to Palestine is the Hizbullah path.
- Over two-thirds of Jordanian MPs demand the implementation of Shari'a
Law.
- A study by the Israeli Nature Reserves and National Parks Authority
states that sewage from Adam settlement is seriously contaminating the
springs that feed into Wadi Qelt, causing a stench and killing animal
life.
Feb. 24: The Israeli PM office announces that settlement activities
in the Golan Heights will continue.
- Pope John Paul II starts his visit to the region, arriving in Egypt.
- In a meeting with PM Barak, French PM Jospin calls for establishing
a Palestinian state saying, "The security of Israel requires a Palestinian
state that can survive and be a democratic, prosperous and stable state."
At a press conference, Jospin later says that France condemns Hizbullah's
"terrorist" attacks against Israel.
- Barak defends yesterday's speech by FM Levy-describing it as the 'voice
of moderation'.
- The Palestinian Monetary Authority signs an agreement with Portugal's
central bank to train Palestinians to operate their own central bank,
insure bank deposits and manage a national budget.
- The PA commissions the French-Dutch "European Gaza Development Group"
to build Gaza's commercial seaport.
Feb. 25: French PM Jospin meets with PLC speaker Qrei'a and Faisal
Husseini.
Feb 26: Students stage protests against the French PM Lionel Jospin during
his visit to the BZU after Jospin makes provocative statements describing
the Lebanese resistance against Israeli occupation in Lebanon as terrorism.
The PA orders BZU closed for three days and employs strict measures against
students who participated in the attack. The PLC issues a statement condemning
the attack.
- Flights to Saudi Arabia for the annual hajj begin to take off from Gaza
International Airport (until 2 March).
- Egypt's Pres. Mubarak states that the deadlock in the peace process
will lead to 'horrible violence' in the region and that the Palestinian
problem is a time bomb that might explode at any time.
Feb. 27: Israel seizes 3,000 dunums of agricultural land from Az-Zawiya
village near Nablus to expand a nearby stone quarry.
- Arriving in Israel, head of the European Commission Romano Brodi begins
his regional visit.
- French Pres. Chirac blames PM Jospin for his recent statements saying
they contradict French policies.
- Palestinian figures in the Diaspora launch a worldwide campaign for
the right of return for Palestinian refugees.
Feb. 28: In Al-Mughayyir village, near Ramallah, Israeli settlers
protected by Israeli troops destroy over 700 olive trees.
- The IDF removes 15 Palestinian families, some 100 people, from their
homes in caves in the south Hebron region for being too close to Jewish
settlements and military camps. They are allowed to return on 29 March
following an Israeli High Court ruling.
- Dennis Ross returns to the US having failed to revive talks between
Israel and the Palestinians.
- Hebron University student elections results are announced: of the 41
seats, the Islamic Bloc won 19, Fateh 18, the Islamic Group and the Change
and Democracy Party 2 each.
Feb. 29: PA Police Chief Maj.-Gen. Ghazi Jabali issues orders banning
Palestinians from organizing processions, demonstrations or holding public
meetings without obtaining approval from the district police commander.
March 1: Ha'aretz reports that final approval has been given for
the construction of a high tech industrial park on 200 dunums in the Etzion
settlement bloc.
March 1-3: In Hanoi, the Asian Meeting on the Question of Palestine
is held, attended by PLO Exec. Committee member Suleiman An-Najjab. At
the end, the 'Hanoi Declaration' is issued, proclaiming a commitment to
support the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination and
the establishment of an independent and sovereign Palestinian State.
March 2: The last plane with pilgrims aboard leaves Gaza for Saudi
Arabia, but Israeli forces have prevented 19 Gazans from leaving.
- Israeli forces storm the village of Taybeh, inside the Green Line, surrounding
a house where Hamas members are allegedly preparing bombs. In the exchange
of fire, three Palestinians are killed and a fourth is buried under the
rubble of the house.
March 4: The PA announces that the 13 Sept. deadline for a permanent
peace deal with Israel was final and non-negotiable because the Palestinian
Central Council has decided that the state will be declared no later than
that date.
March 5: About 100 Palestinian students begin a hunger strike in
support of BZU students who were arrested by PA police after violent protests
against French PM Jospin a week earlier.
- The PA police respond by releasing all the BZU students in their custody,
thus ending a week of protest.
March 7: Israeli Min. of Education Yossi Sarid's proposal to include
Palestinian poets like Mahmoud Darwish on the Israeli high school reading
list sparks controversy in Israel.
- PA Min. of Social Affairs Intisar Al-Wazir submits her resignation in
protest of a budgetary cut in the funds for the needy; Pres. Arafat rejects
her resignation and is said to reconsider her demands.
March 8: The Israeli High Court of Justice rules that Arabs can
move into the Jewish town of Katzir on the grounds that Israel cannot
discriminate between Jews and Arabs in most issues of land allocation.
Katzir had previously denied the family of Adel Qadan the right to buy
a home within the town.
- Israel's parole board decides to release settler Yoram Skolnik serving
a life sentence for killing a Palestinian farmer in 1993 whose hands were
bound. The Supreme Court later rejects the decision and orders him to
remain in jail.
- In a press interview, Turkish Pres. Suleiman Demerel says that the PA,
Jordan and Israel are preparing a joint project to purchase water from
Turkey.
March 11: The Arab League FMs meeting in Beirut issue a concluding
statement calling on Arab countries to freeze normalization with Israel
in response to Israel's raids on Lebanon and to reconsider participating
in multilateral talks with Israel.
- In Ramallah, Palestinian intellectuals and journalists in coordination
with An-Nasr TV and Al-Manara radio station launch the 'One Million Candles'
solidarity campaign with Lebanon, as part of which a delegation will travel
to Beirut to light candles at the end of the month.
March 13: Lebanese Shi'i leader Mustafa Dirani files a lawsuit
against the Israeli Government claiming that he was raped and tortured
during interrogations.
March 14: Israel and the PA agree on maps detailing an upcoming
Israeli redeployment from 6.1% of the West Bank.
March 15: The Israeli cabinet approves the map of the 6.1% of West
Bank land to be transferred to full Palestinian control (Area A). The
area -(5.1% is currently Area B, 1% Area C)- includes: Salfit village,
Halhoul, the southern Mount Hebron villages (incl. Dura and Yatta), Bani
Na'im, the Bethlehem district villages of Ubeidia, Dar Salah and Ash-Shawawra,
Beitunia, and some villages in the Jenin district. After the transfer
18.2% of the West Bank will be Area A, and 24,7% Area B.
March 16: Rabbi Menachem Fruman, leading a delegation of settlers
and religious Jews, meets with Pres. Arafat on the occasion of Eid Al-Adha
to deliver a message of peace and harmony between the two religious communities.
March 19: The Israeli cabinet approves the third and last stage
of Israeli redeployments in the West Bank during the interim period: transfer
of 5.1% of Area B and 1% of Area C to full Palestinian control (Area A).
March 20: Israeli soldiers shoot and kill Halima Abdel Aziz Al-Aloul
(Al-Sharuf), 45, mother of 12, near an army checkpoint in the Hebron district
when her husband turns the car back realizing that he does not have his
car papers.
- Pope John Paul II arrives in Amman.
March 21: Israel transfers 6.1% of the West Bank to the PA as part
of the final stage of the second further redeployment.
- Final status talks resume in Washington, DC.
March 22: Visiting Bethlehem, Pope John Paul II states. "No one
can ignore how much the Palestinian people have had to suffer in recent
decades" and that they "have the natural right to a homeland and the right
to live in peace and tranquility with other peoples of this area."
- Over 55 residents and several policemen are injured when Palestinian
police storm Dheisheh RC prior to the Pope's visit after a trivial traffic-related
argument triggers a fight between police and residents. After the visit,
police return, beat camp residents and raid houses, infuriating the residents.
- The Internet Corp. for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), which regulates
Net addresses, has granted the PA its own two-letter suffix for "online
real estate". As with other country codes, Palestinians will be able to
register addresses under their own domain, 'ps' for Palestinian State.
March 23: Israel announces the confiscation of hundreds of dunums
of Palestinian land near Ramallah to open a bypass road linking Bet El
with Ofra settlement.
March 24: Kol Ha'ir quotes a settler from the Adura settlement
near Hebron, who put his house up 'for sale' in a Palestinian paper, as
saying "although my neighbors have concerns, I promise you that there
will be many after me."
March 28: The Israeli magistrate court in Afula rules that Israel
must pay NIS 670,000 as compensation to five Palestinians from Qabatia
who were beaten by Israeli soldiers at the beginning of the Intifada.
March 29: The Israeli High Court of Justice rules that the 730
Palestinians expelled from their homes in the south Hebron hills can return
for the time being.
- Hundreds of Palestinians march through Ramallah and Al-Bireh demanding
the release of the Palestinian prisoners still behind Israeli bars.
March 30: At the opening of a Fateh Youth conference in Ramallah
Pres. Arafat affirms that this year is the year of the establishment of
the independent Palestinian state and that Palestinian independence will
not be completed without Jerusalem being the eternal capital of Palestine.
April 1: Rafah residents hold a sit-in in front of the Governorate
demanding Pres. Arafat's intervention in a plan to cancel their ownership
of 2,525 dunums of land to establish an industrial zone in Rafah.
- On the 32nd anniversary of the establishment of the Jewish community
in the city, PM Barak sends a congratulatory message to the settlers in
Hebron, expressing his support for their presence in the city..
April 2: PA Environment Min. Yousef Abu Safiyeh is attacked by
five men in his office in Ramallah.
- The Palestinian national soccer team beats its Pakistani counterpart
with 2-0 at the Asian Group Games in Doha, Qatar.
April 3: At a ceremony commemorating 32 years of Jewish resettlement
in Hebron, Israeli Housing Min. Yitzhak Levy promises 15 new permanent
dwelling units at Tel Rumeida.
April 4: PLC and PLO members and other national figures sign a
petition calling for the release of Dr. Abdel Sattar Qassem, detained
in Jericho prison without trial.
April 7: A Peace Now report reveals that some 7,120 housing units
are currently under construction in Jewish settlements in the WBGS.
April 8: Three BZU students drown at Akka beach, one after falling
into the water and the others while trying to rescue her. BZU suspends
classes for four days as students and professors attend the funerals.
April 9: Presidential Sec.-Gen. Tayib Abdul Rahim says that the
Palestinians oppose any attempt to accommodate Palestinian refugees in
Lebanon, Iraq, or Canada or Australia.
- Settlers from Kedumim uproot hundreds of olive trees in the Palestinian
village of Kufr Qaddum.
- A popular anti-normalization with Israel conference is held in Kuwait,
attended by participants from the Gulf States.
April 10: The Knesset's Budget and Security Committee approves
$400 million for security in settlements and the construction of 12 bypass
roads, to be funded from the $1.2 billion in US assistance promised as
part of the Wye Agreement in Oct. 1998.
- Israel lifts the construction 'freeze' in the Golan heights, indicating
its retreat from negotiations with Syria.
April 11: Head of the Palestinian delegation to the final status
talks, Yasser Abed Rabbo, conveys to his Israeli counterpart Oded Eran
five Palestinian demands to advance the peace talks:
- No to conceding any part of the Palestinian territories occupied in
1967, incl. Arab Jerusalem.
- No to the legitimacy of Jewish settlements.
- No to adjourning final status issues like Jerusalem and refugees or
accepting a partial framework deal.
- No to any Israeli military presence inside the Palestinian state from
the Jordanian River up to borders with Egypt.
- No to accommodating Palestinian refugees outside their homeland.
April 12: At the G77 summit in Havana, Pres. Arafat says this year
will witness the declaration of a Palestinian state and asks the present
leaders to back the Palestinian demands.
- The PCBS reports that over 25% of Palestinian children live in poverty
and almost 6% of children aged 10-17 are working.
April 15: During a joint press conference with visiting Chinese
Pres. Jiang Zemin in Bethlehem Arafat denies press reports circulated
by the Israeli media that Palestinians accept the establishment of a Palestinian
state in 65% of the West Bank.
- Press reports say that Israel is considering a proposal under which
the PA will receive parts of the Jordan Valley and then lease it to Israel
for 20 years. Palestinians respond by saying such scenarios are nothing
but trial balloons.
- Israeli settlers attack 71-year-old Thahab Najjar of Burin village near
Nablus, kick her and try to throw her into a pit.
April 17: Huge popular rallies are held throughout the WBGS to
commemorate the Palestinian Prisoner Day; in many places protestors clash
with Israeli soldiers, the worst confrontation being near Rachel's Tomb
in Bethlehem.
- The UN Human Rights Committee demands by a vote of 31-3 with 19 abstentions
a halt to Israeli settlement construction in occupied territories and
condemns Israeli human rights violations.
- Syrians on the Golan commemorating the day French troops withdrew from
Syria in 1946 are joined by busloads of Palestinian sympathizers.
- The Palestinian High Court rules that Saleh Talahmeh and Mohammed An-Natsheh,
imprisoned since 1996 and 1998 respectively, be released for lack of evidence.
The PA refuses to enact the order.
April 18: The administrative councils of the two Gaza universities
and PA police close down the campuses to restore order after clashes between
students of the Hamas-affiliated Islamic University and those from the
Al-Azhar University, close to Fateh, erupt, leaving over 30 injured.
- Three Palestinian homes in Issawiyya are demolished by Israeli forces.
April 24: Violent clashes break out in Qalandia RC after the PA
state security court sentences five members of the Abu Gharbiyyeh family
- charged with assaulting Environment Min. Yousef Abu Safiyyeh on 2 April
- to several years in prison, and fellow Fateh-Jerusalem members block
the Ramallah-Jerusalem road and throw stones at PA cars. In Jerusalem,
shops close in protest at the sentence.
April 25: During a visit to Ramallah King Abdullah renews Jordan's
support for the establishment of a Palestinian state with Jerusalem as
its capital.
April 26: In Paris, a UN conference on Palestinian refugees - in
conjunction with the Arab League and the OIC - convenes.
April 27: After unknown assailants shoot at the car of a female
settler near Alon Moreh settlement, injuring her, the Israeli army imposes
a curfew on the adjacent village of Deir Al-Hatab.
April 28: Israeli authorities notify Mohammed Suleiman Al-Astal
that he is prohibited to pave a road on his property adjoining the Mawasi
area of Khan Younis.
April 30: In Eilat, Palestinian-Israeli talks on a framework agreement
for the final status negotiations resume.
- The PA and Turkey sign a tourism cooperation protocol.
Late April: The Gen.-Sec. of the PFLP George Habash resigns from his post
after 33 years.
May 1: Palestinian prisoners being held in Israeli jails begin
a hunger strike to draw attention to their poor conditions.
May 2: After a child is killed in a traffic accident on the Ramallah-Jerusalem
road at Qalandia RC, protests erupt over the state of the road, for the
improvement of which Japan allocates $6 million, but the WJM refuses to
allow the upgrade. Residents throw stones at Israeli vehicles and clash
with Israeli soldiers.
May 3: Education Minister Naim Abu Al-Humus resigns, citing PA
failure to increase teacher salaries as the reason.
May 4: After two days of paralyzed air traffic to and from Gaza
Airport, Palestinian Civil Aviation Authority Fayez Zeidan announces that
planes will resume their routes. The crisis started when Israel rejected
an alternative shorter flight route proposed by Egypt and returned a plane
from Cairo on 3 May as well as a Moroccan plane on 2 May.
May 5: Omar Assaf, head of the Palestinian teachers' union is arrested
and the Ramallah radio station, which afforded him a platform, is closed.
May 7: Following a basketball game the day before in which some
spectators attempted to attack the players PA police forces enter the
Burj RC, attack, insult and arrest residents in order to show their strength.
50 are arrested. In protest, the camp observes a strike the next day called
for by the Popular Committee.
- The PA Min. of Education decides to extend the school year to 6 June
to make up for time lost during the teachers strike.
May 8: Israeli soldiers open fire on Palestinian students demonstrating
in Bethlehem; six are injured.
May 9: The Arab League informs the five permanent UNSC members
of their decision to suspend Arab participation in multilateral talks
until there is progress in the peace process.
May 10: The Palestinian Bar Association notifies all lawyers working
with the Palestinian Center for Human Rights in Gaza and over 30 other
lawyers working with human rights groups or NGOs that their names have
been removed from the list of practicing lawyers, meaning they can no
longer practice law nor appear before courts.
- Peaceful marches in solidarity with Palestinian prisoners begin to take
place in most Palestinian cities. Where the Israeli army interferes violent
clashes erupt with six killed and over 800 injured by 16 May.
May 11: A press release by the Arab Human Rights Organization in
Cairo condemns the Palestinian Bar Association's decision to suspend 31
lawyers as "arbitrary, contradicting the Universal Declaration for Human
Rights."
- PA police arrests Mohammed Deif, one of Israel's most wanted Hamas members.
- The Tel Aviv District Court sentences West Bank settler Gul Hamel to
life in prison for the Oct. 1998 killing Mohammed Zalmut, 70.
May 12: Yerushalim reports that Housing and Construction Min. Yitzhak
Levy has budgeted $37.5 million for new areas in the Ma'ale Adumim, Etzion
bloc and Har Homa settlements.
May 13: Ahmed Shreim from Qalqilya is shot and killed by Israel
troops clashing with Palestinian demonstrators.
May 13-14: Protests erupt in six Palestinian cities, including Hebron,
Nablus, Bethlehem and Gaza. Palestinians demand the release of 1,650 prisoners
still held in Israeli jails, and express frustration over the failure
of peace negotiations. Among the victims of Israeli troops is a nine-year-old
boy, who looses an eye to a rubber bullet.
May 14: The Arab Center for the Independence of Judges and Lawyers
publishes a press release expressing its "deep frustration at the decision
adopted by the Acting Council of the Palestinian Bar Association against
the Palestinian lawyers. It considered that the decision violates the
right of lawyers to freedom of expression."
- Leading Hamas figure Sheikh Salah Mustafa Shehadeh is released from
an Israeli jail where he has spent 13 years.
May 15: On the 52nd anniversary of the Nakba, Palestinians observe
a general strike and clashes occur throughout the WBGS with Israeli troops.
The confrontations, the worst of which occur at the West Bank settlements
of Bet El and Psagot and at Netzarim in Gaza, last for several days and
leave six Palestinians killed and over 1,000 wounded.
- Yasser Abed Rabbo publicly resigns accusing Israel of trying to divide
his camp, after discovering that a secret, separate channel of talks had
been opened in Stockholm. Two Palestinian policemen die in West Bank rioting.
- Tens of thousands of Jewish settlers rally in West Jerusalem to protest
any potential Israeli territorial concessions.
May 16: The commemoration of the 52nd anniversary of the Palestinian
nakba turns violent as protestors clash with Israeli troops trying to
disperse them. Three Palestinians - Iyad Safadi, 18, Bashar Shanir, 21,
from Askar RC, and Ahmed Odeh, 20, from Ramallah - are killed and some
600 injured.
- In Qalqilya, a Jewish settler driving a bus runs over and kills the
brothers Mohammed and Mahmoud Abu Zeid, 6 and 8, while they are walking
along a nearby bypass road.
- Palestinian teachers announce the suspension of their strike due to
the current situation in the WBGS and in solidarity with Palestinian prisoners
who are on hunger strike in Israeli jails.
May 17: In Al-Bireh, 20 demonstrators were wounded near the City
Inn Hotel, which is evacuated and taken over by Israeli soldiers. In Qalandia,
Palestinian demonstrators storm the airport.
- The Palestinian High Court orders the temporary suspension of the decision
of the Acting Council of the Palestinian Bar Association to remove the
names of seven lawyers from the roll of practicing lawyers and asks for
clarification of the reasons for this decision within eight days.
May 19: In Eilat, Israeli negotiators hand their Palestinian counterparts
a proposed final status map comprising of separate Palestinian autonomous
cantons on 66% of the West Bank; Israel will annex 20% of the West Bank
and the remaining 14% will remain under Israeli control and be negotiated
in the future.
May 20: Over the past ten days, some 1,270 Palestinians have been
injured in clashes between marchers commemorating Nakba day and expressing
solidarity with Palestinian prisoners and Israeli troops.
May 21: Following the unrest in the WBGS, PM Barak orders Israeli
negotiators to end the current round of talks in Stockholm. PA officials
criticize the decision as leading to further tensions.
- On the Day of Rage, Issa Qarakra, 29, from Qaddoum RC in Ramallah dies
from wounds received few days ago.
- Sado Mudhi Al-Hawarin, 15, from Thahriyi, Hebron, dies from injuries
sustained during clashes a week ago.
May 22: Pres. Arafat holds important talks in San'a with Yemeni
Pres. Ali Abdullah Saleh who renews his country's support for the establishment
of a Palestinian state with Arab Jerusalem as its capital.
May 23: In Gaza, settlers from Netzarim close the Karni crossing
in retaliation for Palestinian demonstrations at Netzarim junction.
May 23-24: After announcing its intention to depart ahead of schedule
Israel completely pulls out of South Lebanon after 18 years, a move seen
by Palestinians as prove that no occupation can last forever.
May 27: Settlers of Maale Amos seize 200 dunums from Kisan village
near Bethlehem intending to annex it to the settlement.
May 29: Al-Quds reports that Israeli forces have bulldozed 1,000
dunums of cultivated land in Bidya village near Salfit, in order to open
a new bypass road known as 'Trans-Samaria B'.
- Ma'ariv reports that settlers in the Nablus area have extended their
'patrols', using horses, night-vision glasses and dogs.
- In Stockholm, Israeli Internal Security Min. Shlomo Ben Ami - commenting
on the progress in the final status talks, says that the Palestinians
have to stop "dreaming" about their right of return or Israeli withdrawal
to the pre-1967 borders.
May 31: Hundreds of Palestinians in Israeli jails end a month-long
partial hunger strike after a promise from Israel to improve prison conditions.
June 1: A presidential decree signed by Arafat provides for the
formation of a Supreme Judicial Council for all Palestinian districts,
to be presided over by Supreme Court Chief Justice Radwan Al-Agha and
comprised of heads of supreme and appellate courts.
- 12 Palestinian security officers and residents are injured by Israeli
bullets in the first-ever clashes at Rafah crossing at the border to Egypt.
The dispute began when Israeli security arrested a Palestinian trying
to cross into Egypt on the grounds that he was wanted.
- Ha'aretz reports that YESHA council leaders believe, on the basis of
information from the PM's Office, that Israel will offer the Palestinians
a final 92-95% of the West Bank and divide the settlements into three
categories: those to be evacuated (incl. the Katif bloc in Gaza); those
to be placed under Palestinian sovereignty but still connected to Israel;
and those to be annexed to Israel.
- Ma'ariv reports that settlers from Nachliel near Ramallah have asked
the army for 250,000 rounds of ammunition to be able to withstand possible
attacks by Palestinians.
- A tender is published in Yediot Aharanot for the construction of 86
dwelling units in the Golan settlement of Katzrin.
June 2: At a Labor Party meeting PM Barak says he is willing to
leave 20% of the Jewish settlers in the West Bank under PA sovereignty
in the context of a peace deal.
- The YESHA settler council decides to resume settlement construction
in locations where such activity has been frozen by the government (in
late 1999).
- Peace Now announces that Israel has sold land for 1,596 settlement units
between Jan.-April 2000.
June 4: The Council of Rabbis in 'Judea, Samaria' and Gaza announces,
"The YESHA communities will continue to exist on the holy land. We will
work for the growth of these communities, we will not agree to evacuate
or to accept foreign rule."
June 5: US Sec. of State Albright arrives in the region hoping
to push Palestinian-Israeli talks forward.
- In Ramallah, Pres. Arafat discusses with German FM Joshka Fischer the
MEPP and bilateral relations; Fischer renews Germany's and the EU's support
to the peace process.
June 6: Settler leaders from the Golan and WBGS form a joint committee
to fight against Israeli concessions on settlements.
- 73 leading Palestinians sign a petition calling for a national referendum
to ratify any agreement to be reached with Israel and expressing support
for Pres. Arafat in face of Israeli pressure to impose an unfair deal.
- Khaled Mohammed Younis Baher, 35, from Beit Umar near Hebron, father
of six, dies while in PA custody (after being arrested without charge
on 25 May).
June 8: Pressured by donor countries to improve the investment
climate and donor comfort, the PA finally admits that public revenues
are partly diverted towards the commercial operations of the PA-owned
Palestinian Commercial Services Company (PCSC). The corresponding audit
(undertaken in Feb.) is made public at a meeting in Lisbon of the Ad Hoc
Liaison Committee chaired by Norway.
- Jewish settlers of Ma'ale Amos confiscate some 2,000 dunums of land
belonging to villagers from Arab Ar-Rashayida and Kisan near Bethlehem
in preparation for expanding the settlement.
June 10: Syrian Pres. Hafez Al-Assad dies. The PA declares three
days of mourning.
June 13: Pres. Arafat attends the funeral of deceased Pres. Hafez
Assad at his birthplace town Qirdaha.
- Ha'aretz reports that Israel will sign the convention establishing an
international court for war crimes, but will not accede to its jurisdiction,
mainly because the establishment of civilian settlements in occupied territory
is defined as a war crime.
- Shas resigns from Barak's coalition, leaving a minority govt. of 52
out of 120 MKs.
June 15: Some 4,000 settlers demonstrate outside PM Barak's home
to protest any deal with Palestinians that includes evacuation of settlements
or their transfer to Palestinian jurisdiction.
June 17: Israeli Chief of Staff Gen. Shaul Mofaz threatens to use
heavy artillery, incl. tanks and warplanes, to confront and curb any new
Intifada in the WBGS.
- Hundreds of Palestinians march in Ramallah to protest human and civil
rights violations by PA security forces, urging Pres. Arafat to take a
clear stand on promoting the rule of law.
- In Gaza, settlers from the Gush Qatif bloc bulldoze a 400-m-long Palestinian
road near Mawasi quarter.
June 19: Some 40,000 people attend a demonstration called for by
YESHA against the Barak govt.'s policies.
June 20: On Gaza's Karni-Netzarim road a bomb explodes as an Israeli
convoy moves towards the settlement, injuring one Israeli.
- In Ras Sudr, Sinai, workers discover a mass grave containing the remains
of 52 Egyptian soldiers presumed to have been executed by Israeli forces
in the 1967 War.
June 21: Israel moves armored tanks into Gaza, barricades settlements
and conducts military maneuvers around population centers.
- In Ramallah, Arafat advisor on refugee affairs Abdel Fattah Ghanem is
detained on a 'Presidential Detention Order' after making statements to
Jordanian and Gulf newspapers regarding obstructions and the possible
future of the refugee problem, in which he cited examples of administrative
corruption
- The left-wing Meretz Party (10 MKs) abandons Barak in dispute with religious
coalition members.
June 23: PNC speaker Salim Zanoun says that the Palestinian state
will be declared this year no matter whether a peace agreement is reached
or not.
- The target date for the completion of the third Israeli withdrawal from
occupied territories - incl. three villages near Jerusalem - and the release
of 230 Palestinian prisoners passes unobserved.
June 24: At a discussion in preparation of the PLO Central Council
meeting in early July, PNC members decide that the PA must declare an
independent Palestinian state as scheduled according to the signed agreements
with Israel, i.e., before the end of the year. Also debated is the role
of the PLO after the state declaration.
June 25: Israeli settlers Neve Daniel and Eli Azar attack Al-Khader
village, destroying water wells and fences.
- Israeli Housing Min. Yitzhak Levy approves construction of 400 housing
units to expand Efrat settlement.
June 28: Yediot Aharanot reports that PM Barak has asked US Sec.
of State Albright to inform Chairman Arafat that Israel will annex territories
if he unilaterally declares a Palestinian state on 13 September.
June 30: Israel's Atty Gen. Elyakim Rubinstein argues that UN Res.
242 and 338 do not apply to the current negotiations because they were
passed over 25 years before the establishment of the PA. On 242 he also
says that the withdrawals from Sinai and Lebanon do not represent a precedent
for Israel's pull out from the entire WBGS.
July 1: After a dispute over a stolen car, Raji Fares Ibrahim Saqer,
29, of Al-Amari RC enters a Ramallah meat shop shoots and kills the butcher's
daughter Ahlam Duqmaq, 25, from Al-Bireh, marking the beginning of several
days of violence in the city. Less than 48 hours later, the PA state security
court sentences Saqer to death by hanging and accomplice Jamal Al-Azza
to 12 years of hard labor with a further 6 months for illegal weapon possession.
The sentencing is followed by violent protests by friends and relatives
who clash with police. Shops in Ramallah only reopen on 4 July.
July 2-3: The PLO Central Council convenes with 110 of the 125
members in Gaza and votes unanimously to declare a Palestinian state this
year after the six-year transitional period that ends 13 Sept. A statement
read at the close of the meeting by PNC speaker Salim Za'noun calls upon
the international community to "stand on the side of the Palestinian people
who are determined to reinforce the sovereignty of their state on their
occupied territories by the end of the transitional period."
July 4: Palestinian intellectual Edward Said is photographed throwing
a stone across the South Lebanese border at Fatma Gate, in what he calls
a "symbolic gesture".
July 5: Khalil Abu Arram, 16, from Jania, near Yatta, dies from
the blast of an Israeli landmine.
July 6: The Palestinian leadership accepts Pres. Clinton's invitation
to a three-way summit in Camp David.
- Safwan Asi, 12, from Beit Liqia, Ramallah dies when an Israeli army
bomb left in his family's field explodes.
July 8: PFLP Deputy Sec.-Gen. Abu Ali Mustafa is sworn in on as
the new Sec.-Gen. after party founder George Habash resigned.
- Near Kfar Darom settlement, Israeli soldiers shoot at the car of Itidal
Mu'ammar, killing her and one of her children and injuring her husband
and second child. The Israeli army later officially apologizes, saying
the shooting was an "unfortunate mistake."
July 9: Israeli right-wing parties - Yisrael B'aliyah (4 MKs),
Shas (17 MKs) and the National Religious Party (5 MKs) resign from the
govt. over PM Barak's offer of concessions to the Palestinians in the
upcoming Camp David summit.
July 10: On the eve the Camp David summit Min. of Culture and Information
Yasser Abed Rabbo says that no agreement will be signed that does not
secure an international body monitoring its implementation.
July 11: The US-sponsored Camp David Summit begins; a complete
press blackout is imposed.
- Bashar Al-Assad becomes officially Pres. of Syria.
July 12: Head of the PLO Political Dept. Farouq Qaddumi says that
there is a consensus among the African states on recognizing the independent
Palestinian state once it is declared.
July 13: Ex-pop star Yussef Islam (known formerly as Cat Stevens)
is turned back upon arrival at Ben Gurion airport and prevented from his
pilgrimage to Jerusalem.
- The Israeli Civil Admin. announces plans to build a tourist center ("Metzpia
Ha'jit") on land belonging to the Deir Dibwan village near Ramallah.
July 15: In Hebron near Al-Ibrahimi Mosque, dozens of Palestinians
are injured after being attacked by settlers from Kiryat Arba, who vandalize
Palestinian houses and cars and smash windows.
July 16: The Jerusalem-Ramallah road is closed off near Qalandia
RC after camp youths burn three Israeli Egged buses en route to Bet El
to pick up settlers for a right-wing demonstration- clashes with Israeli
troops ensue.
- In Tel Aviv, tens of thousands of Jewish settlers gather at Rabin's
square to condemn the Camp David summit.
July 18: On the grounds that it is built on state lands the Israeli command
in the West Bank orders the entire village of Beit Iskaria, some 15 km
south of Bethlehem, to evacuate within one month. The 300 villagers are
warned that their houses will be destroyed.
- Thousands demonstrate in Hebron calling for the refugees' right to return
and Palestinian statehood with Jerusalem as its capital. Other demonstrations
in Ramallah and Gaza call for Palestinian national rights incl. statehood,
Jerusalem and return as well as for resisting Israeli and US pressure
on the Palestinian delegation at Camp David.
- A poll by the Arab-American Institute shows that 66% of responding Americans
support the establishment of an independent Palestinian state and 74%
the right of return for Palestinian refugees.
July 19: Karne Shomron settlers seize 100 dunums of land belonging
to villages near Qalqilya.
July 20: Israeli forces are exercising military drills near Israeli
settlements at Gush Katif and Kfar Darom in Gaza.
July 21: The 'principles' of the US proposal discussed at Camp
David reportedly include the following: the establishment of a demilitarized
Palestinian state; no declaration of the 'end to the conflict' at this
stage; Israeli withdrawal from 95% of the West Bank and annexation of
the remainder in an exchange of territory; a safe passage "bridge" between
the WB and GS; a free passage from Bethlehem to Ramallah. On Jerusalem:
Palestinian civilian autonomy (Israeli security control) in and around
the Old City (holy places under independent religious administration)
and free passage route to the Haram Ash-Sharif area; other Palestinian
neighborhoods to get even greater civil-admin. autonomy, while Ma'ale
Adumim and Givat Ze'ev will be annexed to the WJM. On Refugees: Israel
grants recognition of their "suffering"; assimilation in the framework
of family unification for some of them and for others staged assimilation
into the Palestinian state; refugee compensation and rehabilitation through
an international body.
July 22: PA Refugee Affairs Min. Assad Abdel Rahman resigns, saying
he is unwilling to take the responsibility for the Camp David results
on the refugee issue.
- Thousands of Hamas supporters demonstrate in Gaza against Camp David.
July 23: Israeli forces confiscate some 4,000 dunums of land in
the Bethlehem area.
-Sheikh Ahmed Yassin offers Israel a truce in return for complete Israeli
withdrawal from the territories occupied in 1967.
- Pres. Clinton returns from the G8 summit in Japan to the ongoing Camp
David talks.
July 24: The Knesset votes to extend the state of emergency, in
effect in the country since 1948, for a further six months, until 26 Jan.
2001.
July 25: The Camp David summit ends without reaching an agreement
mainly because of the issue of Jerusalem.
July 26: The WBGS and the Diaspora observe a general strike from
12-2 p.m. to support the Palestinian delegation at Camp David and reaffirm
the non-negotiable Palestinian positions.
- US legislators announce draft laws to stop all US aid to the Palestinians
should they unilaterally declare statehood on 13 Sept.
July 27: Pres. Arafat and his accompanying delegation receive a
hero's welcome upon their return from Camp David to Gaza.
July 27-29: A CPRS poll finds that 56% of Palestinians support
a unilateral state declaration in September while 37% support waiting
for an Israeli-Palestinian agreement.
July 28: In an interview with Israel TV Pres. Clinton praises PM
Barak for making "courageous" compromises and warns Arafat not to unilaterally
declare statehood. He also says he will reconsider moving the US embassy
to Jerusalem.
July 30: In Gaza, the PA arrests Dr. Abdul Aziz Rantisi, the no.
2 Hamas official in the WBGS, apparently for criticizing the Israeli-Palestinian
talks at Camp David.
- Israeli settlers seize 50 dunums of land in the Mawasi area in Rafah,
Gaza, and erect greenhouses there.
July 29: Pres. Arafat begins a tour to Arab and European capitals
to enlist support for the Palestinian position on Jerusalem, the refugees,
and the declaration of the Palestinian state on Sept. 13. Ports of call
include Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Tunis and Damascus.
July 31: PM Barak narrowly survives two censure motions from the
right-wing.
- Likud's Moshe Katzav is elected Pres. Of Israel, defeating Labor's Shimon
Peres.
Aug. 3: During the last two weeks, PA security forces have waged
campaigns against Hamas and other Islamists.
- USAID threatens to resort to economic sanctions in case of a unilateral
declaration of the Palestinian State.
- Israeli FM David Levy resigns from the govt. over his opposition to
Barak's peace positions.
- The PLC calls on Pres. Arafat to move ahead with plans to declare a
state on 13 Sept.
- An attempt by Nazareth police to stop trucks from unloading construction
supplies at the disputed site Shihab Eddin results in a fight between
police and the Islamic movement leadership.
Aug. 4: Amnesty International accuses the PA of violating the right
to freedom of expression.
Aug. 5: Hamas' Sheikh Ahmed Yassin expresses his high appreciation
for the Palestinian leadership's commitment to the decisions of the PLO
Central Council and its rejection to all outside pressures to give further
concessions.
Aug. 6: Shas Party leader Rabbi Ovadia Yosef dubs Palestinians
"snakes"; his racist statement is harshly condemned by Palestinians and
other Arabs.
Aug. 8: Five Israeli families appeal to Pres. Arafat to grant them
political asylum in PA areas, saying the Israeli govt. is prohibiting
them from building on lands owned by the Jewish state and they wish to
live with Palestinians.
- Israeli authorities confiscate fruits and destroy stands, located along
Highway 60, an Israeli bypass road just north of Hebron
Aug. 10: Pres. Arafat visits Tehran en route to Moscow and discusses
the possibility of holding an Islamic summit on Jerusalem with Pres. Khatami.
- At a press briefing PA Min. of Information and Culture, Abed Rabbo says
that there is "No alternative for Palestinian full sovereignty over Arab
East Jerusalem," and rules out the possibility of holding a new Camp David
summit.
Aug. 11: Ramez Fayez Mohammed Rashid Elrazi, 25, from Gaza's Nusseirat
RC, dies allegedly of a heart attack in his cell in the Israeli Nafha
prison, where he was serving a three-year sentence for entering Israel
without the required permit.
Aug. 14: Pres. Arafat meets Pakistani Pres. Gen. Musharaf in Islamabad
to discuss the outcome of Camp David and particular the issue of Jerusalem.
Aug. 15: During his meeting with Chinese Pres. Zemin, Pres. Arafat
receives Chinese govt. support for the Palestinians and their right cause.
- An Israeli undercover unit shoots and kills Mahmoud Bazar Abdullah,
73, mukhtar of Surda, Ramallah at 2.00 a.m. The victim had slept on the
roof of his house and fired in the air when he noticed armed people approaching,
taking them for burglars. Abdullah is the 24th person killed by Israeli
army or settlers since the beginning of the year.
Aug. 19: Israeli authorities forbid 'The Camp of Return' for 3,000
youths from the WBGS and Israel being held in Jerusalem.
Aug. 20: In Amman, Jordanian trade unions hold a seminar against
normalization with Israel, denouncing the nullification of a law banning
the sale of land to an enemy and the Jordan Valley draft law allowing
foreigners, incl. Jews, to buy and own lands in the Jordan Valley.
- In Ramallah, the PLC states unequivocally that there will be no peace
deal with Israel without East Jerusalem.
- Ma'en Talhami, 12, from Al-Burj village near Hebron dies when a device
left over by the Israeli army explodes in a field near his home.
Aug. 21: Israel says it has arrested 23 Palestinians, incl. 4 from
inside the Green Line, who are allegedly affiliated with wanted Saudi
Usama Bin Laden and have planned military attacks against Israel.
Aug. 22: Quoting figures released by the Israeli CBS Ha'aretz reports
that the first quarter of 2000 saw an 81% increase in settlement construction,
wherein private construction rose by 141%, construction on public buildings
by 55%.
Aug. 24: Ha'aretz reports that the IDF has sent warnings to settler
leaders in the Hebron and Nablus areas to prevent more attacks on Palestinians.
- Press reports indicate that Lebanon plans to sue Israel in the International
Court of Justice to recover damages caused by Israeli attacks and its
22-year occupation, reparations are estimated at $7 billion.
Aug. 27: Three Israeli soldiers are killed and nine wounded by
friendly fire during a disastrous failed operation by a Duvdevan special
unit supported by helicopter air cover trying to raid the West Bank village
Assira Ashmalia in a hunt for 'most wanted' Hamas leader, Mahmoud Abu
Hannoud, who managed to flee and hand himself in to PA police in nearby
Nablus.
Aug. 28: Jordanian PM Ali Abul Ragheb urges Jordanian professional
associations to abandon their anti-normalization drive aimed at contacts
with Israel.
Aug. 29: In Cairo, a meeting between Pres. Clinton and Pres. Mubarak
to prepare for another Israeli-Palestinian summit fails to succeed. It
is later revealed that Egypt proposed a solution for Jerusalem: Israeli
sovereignty in West Jerusalem, the Jewish Quarter and over the Western
Wall, Palestinian sovereignty in East Jerusalem, incl. Al-Aqsa Mosque;
declaration of Jerusalem as an 'open city' to the believers of the three
faiths, who would enjoy free access to the holy sites; and joint Israeli-Palestinian
patrols on Al-Haram compound. PM Barak rejects.
Aug. 30: PCBS media survey results show that 89.7% of Palestinian
households own a TV set, 45.4% have satellite dishes, and that Qatar-based
Al-Jazireh channel is the most popular channel followed by ART.
- Arafat and Mubarak meet in Alexandria to discuss the Agadir Jerusalem
Committee meeting and other recent developments.
Early Sept.: The British Gas company begins to search for natural gas
on the northern shores of the Gaza Strip.
Sept. 1: In Nablus, Judge of the State Security Court Fathi Abu
Srour sentences Mahmoud Abu Hanuud, who surrendered three days earlier,
to 12 years in prison on charges of having established military cells.
Sept. 2: The PA Education Min. launches a Palestinian curriculum
for grades 5 and 6 as the new school year begins.
Sept. 3: During the Arab League Council meeting in Cairo Papal
Amb. to Cairo Msgr. Paolo Gigilone says that the Vatican is calling for
a special status for Jerusalem with free access to holy sites for all
worshippers.
Sept. 5: The 2nd Annual US State Dept. Report on International
Religious Freedom accuses Israel of discriminatory practices against non-Jewish
groups.
Sept. 6-7: At the UN Millennium celebrations in New York, attended
by over 150 world leaders, Pres. Arafat urges putting an end to the most
difficult refugee problem in the world and the sufferings of the Palestinian
refugees, and stresses that there will be no flexibility with regard to
sovereignty on the Muslim and Christian shrines in Jerusalem. Clinton
fails to resolve the differences between Barak and Arafat during his separate
meetings with both during the summit.
Sept. 10: In Gaza, the 129-member PLO Central Council postpones
declaring statehood to give "peace another chance" until 15 Nov., but
reiterates the Palestinians' right to full sovereignty over East Jerusalem
and their right of return.
Sept. 11: The PA State Security Court in Gaza sentences Mohammed
Daoud Al-Khawaja, convicted of murdering and robbing money-changer Mustafa
Ahmed Jibril Baroud, 70, to death by firing squad.
- Ha'aretz reports that according to the Israeli Housing Min. settlement
construction has increased by 96% during the first half of 2000. Since
Barak's govt. took office (July 1999), work on 1,924 residential units
in settlements has begun (1,384 in the Jerusalem district and 540 elsewhere),
as opposed to 1,845 in 1998 and 1,160 in 1997.
Sept. 13: Israel, Palestinians fail to achieve a final peace accord
by today's deadline.
- After touring Hebron MK Mossi Raz expresses extreme concern over the
situation in the city and the fear that another [Baruch] "Goldstein is
lurking and waiting for the right time to perpetrate another massacre."
Sept. 16: Egyptian FM Amr Musa calls for Palestinian sovereignty
over Palestinian lands occupied by Israel in 1967 incl. East Jerusalem,
saying that Israeli sovereignty over Al-Aqsa Mosque is unacceptable.
- An Arab League statement on the 18th anniversary of the Sabra and Shatila
massacre calls for complete Israeli withdrawal from all Arab territories
occupied in June 1967, and for the establishment of a Palestinian state
with Jerusalem as its capital.
- In Washington, some 10,000 people participate in the 'Return March'
calling for the Palestinian refugees' right of return.
- A coalition for integrity and accountability named 'AMAN' is established
in Ramallah.
Sept. 17: At the Netzarim junction in Gaza, a demonstration commemorating
the Sabra and Shatila massacres escalates into two days of violence.
- In London, several thousand Palestinians, Arabs and British attend the
'Return March' calling for the Palestinian refugees' right of return.
Sept. 19: Israel and the PA agree to establish a Free Trade Area
as part of a final economic accord, after an "effective economic border"
has been established.
- In Paris acting Israeli FM Shlomo Ben-Ami meets with Pres. Chirac to
examine the chances of finding a compromise formula on the issue of Jerusalem.
The currently discussed proposal includes transfer of sovereignty over
the Haram compound to the responsibility of the UNSC.
Sept. 20: The National Beverage Co. and the Palestinian Soccer
League sign an agreement in which the company agrees to sponsor the national
team, which will have the Coca-Cola logo on their team jerseys.
Sept. 21: After years of negotiations Israel and the PA reach an
agreement on the Gaza seaport for the initial phase of which France and
Holland have pledged $70 million. Israel will retain a role in checking
cargo at the port, whose capacity will be limited.
Sept. 22: After 5 years of denial and concealment, the Beilin-Abu
Mazen agreement is published in full in Newsweek.
- The US State Dept. announces suspension of the security clearance of
its Amb. to Israel, Martin Indyk due to investigations against him for
alleged security violations.
Sept. 24: Hisham Abdul Razzaq, in charge of the PA prisoner portfolio,
states still over 1,650 Palestinian political prisoners are held in Israeli
jails.
Sept. 25: After plans to confiscate 1,800 dunums from Beit Mahel
village for expanding 'Nazaret Illit' are announced over 1,000 Arab citizens
inside the 'Green Line' protest at the PM Office against discrimination
and expropriation.
Sept. 27: In Gaza, explosives go off while an Israeli convoy passes
near Netzarim settlement, resulting in the death of an Israeli soldier.
- The Israeli Atty. Gen. drops the corruption charges against former PM
Netanyahu due to insufficient evidence, setting the stage for him to re-enter
politics.
Sept. 28: Pres. Arafat inaugurates Palestine's first gas well,
35 km from the central Gaza seashore, in cooperation with British Gas
Co.
Sept. 29: After meeting with Syrian Pres. Bashar Assad, EU Middle
East envoy Moratinos says that "the differences are very thin" between
Israeli and Syrian positions.
- After Israeli forces attack Palestinians at Al-Aqsa Mosque, leaving
five dead and over 160 injured, violence erupts across the WBGS, leaving
scores of Palestinians wounded. A 3-day general strike is declared to
mourn the martyrs.
Sept. 30: Throughout the WBGS Israeli troops use excessive force
against Palestinian demonstrators protesting against Israeli provocations
and yesterdays deaths; nine Palestinians are killed, incl. three children
under the age of 16, and hundreds injured. The worst confrontations are
in Al-Bireh, Gaza's Netzarim junction and Hebron. Clashes spread into
Israel, where one Palestinian is killed and dozens injured. One of the
martyrs, 12 year old Mohammed Ad-Dura deom Gaza who died in his father
arms, becomes the symbol of the what soon is termed Al-Aqsa Intifada.
Late Sept.: For the first time Syria allows 28 Israeli Arabs to visit
Yarmouk RC to meet relatives they have not seen since 1948.
Sept.: 100-meter swimmer Samar Nassar and athlete Rami Theeb represent
Palestine at the Olympic Games in Sydney.
Oct. 1: At least 12 Palestinians are killed in clashes throughout
the WBGS; Israel uses anti-tank rockets near Netzarim and fires from helicopters
in Nablus. Settler gunfire kills Sara Abdel Haq, 18 months, near Nablus.
Oct. 2: Called for by Palestinian human rights groups LAW and PCHR,
4 international organizations (International Commission of Jurists/Sweden,
the International Federation of Human Rights/Paris, the Euro-Mediterranean
Network for Human Rights/Denmark and Human Rights Watch/US) arrive in
the WBGS to investigate the violations committed.
Oct. 3: Palestinian citizens of Israel call for international protection
after attacks by Israeli civilians, settlers and army inside Israel and
in the WBGS.
- The festival of Arab poets and critics - renamed to the Solidarity Festival
of Arab poets and critics with Jerusalem and the martyrs - opens in Jericho;
participating countries include Tunisia, Jordan, Oman, Iraq and the US.
Oct. 4: While clashes in the WBGS continue, PM Barak and Pres.
Arafat meet with French Pres. Chirac and US Sec. of State Albright in
Paris, where they agree to order forces away from flash-points; nothing
is signed, however, as Israel refuses to accept an international inquiry
into recent events.
- The ICRC "deplores" the Israeli targeting of over 18 Red Crescent ambulances
by gunfire.
Oct. 5: Arafat attends talks with Egyptian Pres. Mubarak and US
Sec. of State Albright, while Barak cancels his participation because
of Arafat's refusal to sign the agreement in Paris.
Oct. 6: Israel seals the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
Oct. 7: UNSC passes Res. 1322 by 14-0 (US abstaining) which "deplores
the provocation carried out at Al-Haram Al-Sharif in Jerusalem on 28 Sept.
2000, and the subsequent violence (…) resulting in over 80 Palestinian
deaths and many other casualties;" and "Condemns acts of violence, especially
the excessive use of force against Palestinians."
- Meanwhile clashes in the WBGS continue for the ninth consecutive day
and raise the number of dead to 75; over 3,000 are injured. In Nablus,
Palestinian protestors storm and destroy 'Joseph's Tomb', after the Israeli
army withdraws its troops from the site.
- Arab-Jewish clashes occur in Jaffa, Tiberias, Hadera, Nazareth and several
villages in the Galilee.
- In South Lebanon, Hizbullah abducts 3 Israeli soldiers; in response,
Barak issues a 4-hour ultimatum for the release of the hostages and a
48-hour ultimatum to Arafat; both are extended after they expire.
Oct. 8: Throughout the West Bank, Israeli settlers protected by
Israeli troops confront Palestinians, killing one and wounding many more
as well as damaging many shops and cars.
- The body of Isam Hamad, 36, from Um Safa near Ramallah is found in a
field near the settlement of Halamish; evidence suggests that he was tortured
and killed by settlers.
- Jewish mobs attack Arabs in Nazareth, incl. the home of MK Azmi Bishara,
stoning Arab homes, cars and passers-by and shouting "death to the Arabs."
Two Arabs are killed and dozens injured. In other areas of the Galilee,
Jewish rioters block roads and attack Arabs citizens. In Tiberias, Jews
destroy a 200-year-old mosque.
- Israel closes Gaza International Airport and Rafah Border Crossing.
Oct. 9: As Yom Kippur begins, PM Barak indefinitely extends the
ultimatum to Arafat.
- UN Sec.-Gen. Kofi Annan and Russian FM Igor Ivanov travel to the region
trying to negotiate an end to the violence in meetings with Israeli and
Palestinian officials.
Oct. 10: The UN Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights
of the Palestinian People expresses grave concern at the continued confrontations
and resulting loss of life, and states that it is due to Israel's refusal
to abide by its obligations under International Law.
Oct. 11: As clashes in the WBGS continue, the Palestinian death
toll climbs to 85 - 26 of them 18 years or younger.
- Arab communities inside the 'Green Line' commemorate the death of 13
demonstrators in recent clashes between Israeli police and local residents.
Oct. 12: Two Israeli soldiers are killed in Ramallah by a Palestinian
mob. Israel reacts by bombing Gaza, Ramallah, and, later in the night
Jericho and Nablus, destroying police headquarters, military bases, and
the TV and radio broadcasting towers.
- During a meeting with Sharon, Barak officially invites Likud to join
a national emergency govt.
Oct. 13: In the early morning Israeli missiles and helicopters
fire at Hebron, injuring several Palestinians and leading to protest marches
later the day, in which one Palestinian is killed and at least 15 injured.
- Other clashes occur in Bethlehem and Al-Bireh and Jerusalem.
Oct. 15: Raed Hamuda, 30, from Al-Bireh dies from injuries sustained
during clashes five days earlier, bringing the Palestinian death toll
to 92, incl. 27 children.
- In Beirut, Hizbullah abducts an Israeli businessman, said to be also
a Mossad agent.
- PM Barak negotiates with Likud Party leader Ariel Sharon to form a "national
unity government."
Oct. 16: The Sharm Esh-Sheikh summit begins with Pres. Arafat,
PM Barak, Pres. Clinton, the UN's Kofi Anan, the EU's Javier Solana, King
Abdullah and Pres. Mubarak. At the end of the summit Clinton announces
that both sides have agreed to halt violence, set up an inquiry into its
causes, and explore restoration of security cooperation as well as a return
to peace negotiations. Neither Barak nor Arafat announces the details
of his position on the agreement.
- Israeli troops shoot and kill a Palestinian policeman in Gaza and a
13-year-old boy from Aida RC in Bethlehem, bringing the death toll of
WBGS Palestinians to 94.
- In clashes throughout the WBGS, some 60 Palestinians are injured.
Oct. 17: The UN Commission on Human Rights in Geneva opens a special
session on the situation in the WBGS and in Israel. Giorgio Giacomelli,
UN investigator to the Palestinian territories (11-15 Oct. 2000), states
that the scale of Palestinian deaths at the hands of Israeli forces during
the recent wave of disturbances is "unprecedented," and that at least
"40% of an estimated 2,000-3,700 Palestinians wounded by Israeli occupation
forces were under the age of 18 and that at least half of the injuries
resulted from the use of live ammunition".
- The Human Rights Watch report on its investigation in the WBGS (4-11
Oct. 2000) condemns Israeli forces for using excessive, lethal force with
demonstrators.
Oct. 18: The International Federation of Human Rights releases
the findings of its mission to the Occupied Territories, pointing to Israel's
excessive and indiscriminate use of force and demands the establishment
of an international independent commission of enquiry.
Oct. 19: A special session of the UN Commission on Human Rights
passes a resolution condemning the "grave and massive violations of the
human rights of the Palestinian people by Israel", and decides to establish
a "human rights inquiry commission, a move Israel denounces.
- Amnesty International calls upon the US govt. to cease all transfers
of attack helicopters to Israel.
- An AI report on its mission to the WBGS (4 Oct. 2000) notes Israel's
"excessive use of force in circumstances in which neither the lives of
the security forces nor others were in imminent danger".
- An UNSCO report estimates the daily economic losses due to the current
crisis for the Palestinians at US$8 million.
Oct. 20: The UN Commission on Human Rights endorses by 19-16 (17
abstentions) a resolution condemning Israel's "disproportionate and indiscriminate
use of force" against Palestinian civilians and requesting High Commissioner
Mary Robinson to undertake an urgent visit to the occupied territories
to take stock of the violations.
- The UNGA adopts a resolution with 92-6 (46 abstentions), condemning
the violence in the OPT and Israel's excessive use of force against Palestinian
citizens, and urging all parties to implement the Sharm Esh-Sheikh understandings.
Oct. 21: As clashes throughout the WBGS continue, with dozens of
Palestinians newly wounded, the death toll amongst Palestinians increases
to 112 (incl. 34 children).
- In Hebron, Fateh activist Fayez Mahmoud Al-Qymri, 33, is shot in the
head and killed by Israeli 'special units' while washing his car.
- PM Barak's announces that "Israel will take a time out from the peace
process" and that it is now time for an emergency unity govt. (to include
the Likud).
- An Amnesty International delegation arrives in Israel to gather information
regarding arrests and detentions of Palestinians from Israel and East
Jerusalem. The report calls for international protection of the Palestinian
people.
Oct. 21-22: An Arab League emergency summit convenes in Cairo to
discuss the recent violence in the Palestinian territories; it allocates
US$1 billion in funds to support the Palestinian population, calls for
a UN-led "international war crimes tribunal" to investigate actions committed
by Israel, and requests a UN presence in the WBGS. The final statement
stops short of calling for breaking ties with Israel, but calls for ending
all steps toward normalization of relations with Israel.
Oct. 22: Following the Arab summit in Cairo, Tunisia and Oman announce
their severing of ties with Israel and closing their trade representations
in Tel Aviv.
Oct. 23: Morocco severs ties with Israel, closing the consulate
in Tel Aviv and Israel's interest office in Rabat.
- Israel re-closes Gaza International Airport, the Rafah border passage
and King Hussein border passage.
- Shas refuses to join a unity govt., but says it will support it.
Oct. 24: Egypt's FM Musa says that the peace process in its current
form is over.
- Jordanian security forces prevent over 10,000 people participating in
the 'march of return' from Amman to the border with Israel, injuring some
120 marchers in the ensuing clashes.
- Jordan and the US sign a Free Trade Agreement in Washington.
Oct. 25: In a move meant to counter recent UN resolutions ("biased
against Israel"), the US Congress votes 365-30 to condemn the Palestinians
for the current confrontations and calls on Pres. Arafat to stop the violence.
It also passes a new foreign aid bill, allocating $2.82 billion to Israel
for the next fiscal year (=18.9% of the total and the largest aid amount
of any country).
- The Palestinian death toll in the ongoing Al-Aqsa Intifada reaches 123,
incl. 39 children. The total injured is 5,862.
Oct. 26: During a visit to Beit Jala and Aida RC, Latin Patriarch
Michel Sabbah stresses that Palestinian Christians and Muslims are one
people with a shared destiny.
Oct. 27: At the end of their week-long mission in the WBGS, a medical
team from Physicians for Human Rights-USA release their findings, saying
that the IDF has used live ammunition and rubber bullets excessively and
inappropriately to control demonstrators, and that Israeli soldiers appear
to be shooting to inflict harm, rather than solely in self-defense.
Oct. 29: At a press conference, PA Min. of Industry and Trade Maher
Al-Masri says that all economic sectors are in a 70%-decline and that
the Israeli govt. is holding back custom revenues. Many Palestinians have
become unemployed, as employers are unable to keep them on the payroll.
- Barak-Sharon talks over a national emergency govt. collapse when Sharon
demands a veto over all peace process decisions.
- Terminally ill Riad Awwad, 26, dies at Allenby Bridge after being banned
from returning to his hometown of Beit Jala for two consecutive days.
Nov. 1: During
his meeting with German Chancellor Schroeder, Pres. Arafat calls for a
firmer German and European role in the peace process; Schroeder confirms
the Palestinian people's right to self-determination.
- PM Barak wants complete economic separation between Israel and the Palestinian
economy, particularly in infrastructure, and believes that this could
be achieved in 3 to 5 years.
Nov. 1-2: During the night, Regional Cooperation Min. Shimon Peres
meets with Chairman Arafat in Gaza; they discuss the recent violence and
agree to to certain cease-fire terms.
Nov. 2: Israeli authorities close down Gaza International Airport
for the third time since the beginning of the Intifada.
Nov. 4: In Hebron, a 23-day old baby girl dies from poisonous tear
gas fired by Israeli troops in residential areas.
Nov. 5: As the Al-Aqsa Intifada enters its 38th consecutive day,
the Palestinian death toll climbs to 153, with over 4,800 wounded.
- Lebanese children seize an Israeli cow hostage near the international
borders between Israel and Lebanon, saying they would not return it until
their lambs, which disappeared into Israel, are returned.
Nov. 6: Barak easily survives four censure motions in the Knesset
filed by Arab MKs to protest the deaths of 13 Israeli Arabs in the recent
violence.
Nov. 7: The Vatican calls on Israelis and Palestinians to return
to the negotiating table, saying that neither has an absolute right to
Jerusalem.
- A Jewish settler runs over and kills Ahmed Khoffash, 8, from Mardah
village near Nablus.
- A German airplane transfers 23 injured Palestinians to Germany for treatment.
- The US State Dept. announces the international commission of inquiry
into events in the WBGS as follows: heading the commission will be ex-senator
George Mitchell (mediated in the peace talks in Northern Ireland), members:
ex-senator Warren Rudman, former Turkish Pres. Suleiman Demirel, the EU's
Javier Solana and Norwegian FM Thorbjorn Jagland.
Nov. 8: Peace Now releases details of budget submissions to the
Knesset, revealing that PM Barak will ask for 1.2 billion NIS for Jewish
settlements in the WBGS in 2001.
- Pres. Arafat leaves for a meeting with Pres. Mubarak in Cairo from where
he continues to London to meet with PM Blair before leaving to Washington.
- Ha'aretz reports about an Israeli govt. plan to double the Jewish population
in the Misgav region of the Galilee - currently inhabited by an Arab majority
- within the next five years.
Nov. 9: Pres. Arafat meets Pres. Clinton in Washington; they reportedly
discuss the American "bridging proposals" but with no clear outcome. Arafat
says he is ready to take part in another summit, if such a meeting is
properly prepared and its success is assured; he also raises his demand
for sending an international force to the region.
- The UNSC discusses the demand for an international protection force
to protect Palestinians in the WBGS.
- An Israeli combat helicopter attacks the car of Fateh-Tanzim activist
Hussein Abayat, 37, in Beit Sahour with missiles, killing him and two
52 and 53 year-old women bystanders. A passenger in the car and three
other civilians are injured. In revenge, Fateh vowes to assassinate IDF
Chief-of-Staff Lt. Gen. Shaul Mofaz.
- The PA delays its declaration of independent statehood, planned for
15 Nov., for the third time.
- Responding to intense pressure from other Islamic countries, Qatar announces
its closure of Israel's trade office in Doha, citing "the escalation of
Israeli repression in the occupied territories."
Nov. 9-10: A FM meeting in advance of the summit of the Organization
of the Islamic Conference (OIC) discusses the violence in the Palestinian
territories and calls on all Muslim countries to break off relations with
Israel.
Nov. 11: Hamas activist Ibrahim Bani Odeh, 34, from Nablus is killed
when explosive device goes off in the car he is driving, apparently activated
remotely from an Israeli helicopter.
Nov. 12: In Washington, PM Barak holds talks with Pres. Clinton
to discuss the American bridging proposal to resolve the final status
arrangement, as based on the Camp David understandings
- UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (UNCHR), Mary Robinson, on a visit
to the WBGS to investigate Israeli human rights violations against the
Palestinian people, travels to Hebron. Israeli settlers attack journalists
in the delegation and her car is hit by shots. Robinson holds Israeli
troops responsible for firing on her convoy.
- The Israeli army attacks and kills two Palestinians from helicopters,
then uses robots to remove their bodies from the car before burning it.
- Salah Eddin Brigades claim responsibility for the killing near Ar-Ram
of Qasem Khleif of Beit Safafa for collaborating with Israel.
Nov. 12-14: The 9th OIC summit, called "the summit of the Al-Aqsa
Intifada," convenes in Doha. A statement issued condemns Israeli
atrocities against the Palestinian people, and demands international protection
forces to protect the Palestinian people.
Nov. 13: Israel orders that no goods may enter the PA territories,
aside from humanitarian aid products like food and medicine, while gasoline
will be kept a minimum level and raw materials, such as concrete and cement,
be stopped.
- A BZU Development Studies Program poll shows that 80% support military
attacks against Israel targets, 74% oppose the participation of children
in the confrontations, 57.8% support the continuation of the peace process
on the basis of international law, and 75% of those polled said they support
the continuation of the Intifada.
Nov. 14: In their meeting in London, UN Sec.-Gen. Kofi Annan presents
a secret, international initiative to restart the peace process to PM
Barak: convening an international 'peace summit' chaired by the UN and
attended by delegates from the US, EU, Russia, China, Israel, Palestine,
Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, and possibly Saudi Arabia.
Nov. 15: On the 12th anniversary of the Palestinian declaration
of independence, Palestinians flock to the streets in symbolic celebrations.
- UN Human Rights High Commissioner Mary Robinson says she is worried
by the escalating situation in the WBGS and accuses Israel of using excessive
force against the Palestinians. She also refutes allegations that Palestinian
children are being pushed to the forefront of confrontations by the PA.
- At a Kahane memorial event in Jerusalem members of the outlawed Kach
movement vow violence against Palestinians as response to what they call
'army restraint', saying "The Arabs must be made to feel afraid."
Nov. 16: The Israeli army and GSS arrest 15 Fateh-Tanzim members
in the West Bank villages Kusra, Talfit and Al-Muayir (all Area B) for
allegedly having carried out shooting attacks.
- Eight Palestinians are killed and over 100 injured in heavy Israeli
overnight bombing of Palestinian residential areas in the Bethlehem district
and in the north. Among the victims is German doctor Harald Fischer from
Beit Jala who is killed while trying to evacuate injured neighbors.
Nov. 17: Khaled Abdallah Salameh, 25, is shot and killed by Israeli
forces in the Akbat Jaber RC in Jericho.
Nov. 18: PNC speaker Salim Za'noun says that the Palestinian announcement
of an independent state will be made on 31 Dec. 2000, coinciding with
the anniversary of the 1965 outbreak of the armed resistance (Fateh).
Nov. 19: Jordanian unions and associations publish a blacklist
of people and companies that refuse to sever their "normalization" ties
with Israel.
- The PA issues instructions prohibiting shooting from Palestinian 'A'
areas.
Nov. 20: In a bomb attack on an Israeli settler school bus in Gaza,
two Israelis are killed and 12 injured. In retaliation, Israeli military
bulldozes dozens of dunums of agricultural lands, uproots trees and destroys
farms and homes in Gaza. Later, Israeli helicopter gunships fire over
50 missiles at multiple targets in Gaza, hitting 12 buildings (incl. the
TV broadcasting station, communications center, electricity building)
and causing damage to many civilian houses. At least 125 people are injured,
including 60 children. One man was declared dead.
- During a meeting with opposition parties Likud leader Sharon calls on
PM Barak to assassinate Mohammed Dahlan, whom he holds responsible for
the attack on the school bus.
- The Israel Land Admin. issues a tender for 76 new housing units in the
settlement of Elkana near Qalqilya, bringing the total of tendered settlement
housing units by the Barak govt. to 3,575.
Nov. 21: Egyptian Pres. Mubarak recalls Amb. to Israel Mohammed
Bassiouny in protest against "Israeli aggression" against the Palestinians.
This is the first time Egypt has recalled its Amb. since Israel's invasion
of Lebanon in 1982.
- Palestinian NGOs call on Kofi Annan, UN Sec.-Gen., Arab League Sec.-Gen.
Ismat Abdel Majid, and all organizations that care about human rights
to intervene immediately by putting pressure on Israel to lift the siege
imposed on the Palestinian territories and to provide international protection
for the Palestinian people.
- The Orthodox Church Council in Jordan and Palestine condemns Israeli
aggression against Palestinians and calls for international protection.
Nov. 22: Israeli tanks open fire on two Palestinian civilian vehicles
near Morag settlement in the GS, assassinating four Palestinian Tanzim
activists, and injuring 8. The attack brings the Palestinian death toll
since 29 Sept. to 222, 68 of whom are children.
- Arriving in Israel on the final leg of a Middle East tour US Defense
Sec. William Cohen tells PM Barak that Israel should allow the international
fact-finding committee to begin its investigation into the recent violence
as this would have a calming effect.
- In the Israeli town of Hadera a car bomb goes off, leaving 2 killed
and over 50 injured.
- In Selit Al-Daher village near Jenin four Palestinians are injured,
after a settler opens fire at a group of villagers.
- Settlers continue to harass villagers from Hares near Nablus, uprooting
trees, closing the entrances to the village and threatening the inhabitants.
Nov. 23: Hamas member Ibrahim Abdul-Karim Bani Odeh, 33, from Tammoun
village near Jenin, is assassinated when an explosive in the car that
he was driving (belonging to his cousin Allan Bani Odeh, later convicted
as collaborator with Israel) detonates.
Nov. 24: ILO Dir.-Gen., Juan Somavia, warns of an "evolving humanitarian
crisis in the Palestinian territories resulting from the closure, (…)
unemployment and the inability of many workers to meet their families'
basic needs".
- FIDA activist Firas Qasem Saba'neh, 25, is assassinated near Jenin by
Israeli 'special units.'
- Pres. Arafat meets Russian Pres. Putin who says Russia is ready to submit
a peace initiative.
Nov. 25: At a press conference, PA Min. of Social Affairs Intisar
Al-Wazir says that not one dollar from funds collected to assist the Palestinian
people has yet reached the Min. or the PA.
Nov. 26: In Cairo, GSS Chief Avi Dichter and head of Preventive
Security Service in Gaza, Mohammed Dahlan, meet to discuss renewing security
coordination between the two sides.
Nov. 26-27: During the night, five Palestinians - Qusay Zahran,
Ziad Salma, Mohammed Odwan, Mahmoud Al-Adl, and Mahdi Jabr - are killed
in cold blood by Israeli soldiers who open fire at them near the by-pass
road south of Qalqilya.
Nov. 27: The Israeli High Court adjourns a hearing on the Likud's
petition calling for an early elections bill to be passed with only a
simple majority on the first reading, rather than an absolute majority
of 61 out of 120 Mks.
- The Israeli parliament votes in favor of a bill aimed at blocking the
return of Palestinian refugees to Israeli territory as well as changes
to Jerusalem municipal boundaries by requiring an absolute majority of
the 120-member Knesset to authorize either
- Islamic representatives request at the UNSC that military forces be
sent to the WBGS to protect the Palestinians.
Nov. 28: The FMs of Jordan and Egypt meet in Aqaba with Abu Mazen
and Saeb E |