Kuwait Times

Israel police evict wildcat settlers as deadline looms

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NETIV HAAVOT OUTPOST: Israeli police began evicting settlers from homes in a West Bank outpost yesterday ahead of a court deadline to leave structures partially built on Palestinia­n land, an AFP correspond­ent reported. Young boys in tears were followed by a young woman holding a baby, as they were escorted out of their home in the Netiv Haavot neighborho­od of Elazar settlement, south of Jerusalem. They left without any resort to physical contact by the unarmed police.

In February, Israel’s Supreme Court gave the settlers until June 15 to vacate 15 homes found to have been built partly on private Palestinia­n land. An estimated 2,000 people, most of them young activists, had travelled to the outpost to support the settlers and protest against their eviction. Large Israeli flags were flying on some of the rooftops, as well as signs pledging to return to the site.

After morning prayers, men sang and danced in a show of faith outside the homes to be razed. Police entered house after house, escorting residents and supporters or in some cases carrying them out without objection. By the early afternoon, only one house remain occupied, with dozens of youths standing on its roof, as police assessed how to tackle the potentiall­y volatile situation. ‘Peaceful protest’

Resident Aviad Amitai said that yesterday marked the start of a three-day process, with police clearing people from the houses subject to the court order before demolishin­g them. “We have a peaceful protest, we are law-abiding people, we are not going to show any violence here,” Amitai told AFP. Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said that while residents did not want the event to be violent, “we’ve seen in previous evacuation­s police officers being injured as a result of stones or violent incidents.”

He said that to keep away those intent on violence, police had set up roadblocks and denied access to 10 people. Police deployed 500 officers to secure the location and “continue to evacuate the area, step by step”. Rosenfeld said the eviction of the 15 families was expected to take “at least several hours, probably the whole day.” Hananel Dorni, chairman of settler group the Yesha council, said the court’s decision to demolish the homes was “unwarrante­d”. Agricultur­e Minister Uri Ariel, himself a settler, said the discussion­s leading up to the court’s decision were like those in Sodom and Gomorrah, ancient cities that according to the Bible were demolished by God for their sinfulness.

 ??  ?? Israeli police evict settlers in the Netiv Haavot neighbourh­ood of the Elazar settlement, south of Jerusalem, yesterday. — AFP
Israeli police evict settlers in the Netiv Haavot neighbourh­ood of the Elazar settlement, south of Jerusalem, yesterday. — AFP

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