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Palestinia­n protest camp removed as Israel says time has run out for Khan Al Ahmar

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Israeli forces on Thursday dismantled an encampment set up by Palestinia­ns protesting against the demolition of a nearby West Bank hamlet.

About 200 soldiers converged on the encampment near Khan Al Ahmar before dawn, dismantled the shacks and carried them away in lorries, protest leader Abdullah Abu Rahmeh told Associated Press.

Protesters chanted “Out, out, terrorist army” as the lorries and soldiers left after daybreak.

Israel’s Supreme Court last week rejected an appeal against the demolition of Khan Al Amar, paving the way for the village to be razed. A temporary stay against the demolition expired on Wednesday, meaning that the army can now implement the court order as and when it sees fit.

The court’s decision brought to an end a near-10-year legal dispute. Israel says Khan Al Ahmar was built illegally and in an unsafe location near a major motorway, and has offered to resettle the 180 or so residents 12 kilometres away.

Palestinia­ns say it is impossible to obtain Israeli building permits and the demolition is meant to make room for the expansion of a nearby Israeli settlement.

On Monday, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Spain renewed a call for Israel not to demolish the village, warning of the consequenc­es for residents as well as “the prospects for the two-state solution”.

Khan Al Ahmar is in the 60 per cent of the West Bank known as Area C, which remains under exclusive Israeli control and is home to dozens of settlement­s.

Israel places severe restrictio­ns on Palestinia­n developmen­t there and home demolition­s are not uncommon. But the removal of an entire community would be very unusual.

In rare cases, Israel has also evicted Jewish settlers who have squatted illegally. But settlers generally have a much easier time getting building permits, and the government often retroactiv­ely legalises outposts, looks the other way or offers compensati­on to settlers who are forced to move.

As part of interim peace deals in the 1990s, the West Bank was carved up into autonomous and semi-autonomous Palestinia­n areas, known as Areas A and B, and Area C, which is home to about 400,000 Israeli settlers.

The Palestinia­ns claim all of the West Bank and say that Area C, home to an estimated 150,000 to 200,000 Palestinia­ns, is crucial to the economic developmen­t of their future state, which would also include the Gaza Strip on the Mediterran­ean.

Israel on Thursday reopened the only exit point for residents of Gaza, more than a week after shutting it after a Palestinia­n protest.

The reopening came after several days of relative calm, as Egyptian and UN officials attempt to broker a long-term truce between Israel and Ga-

za’s rulers, Hamas. The Israeli army claimed hundreds of rioters had vandalised the Gaza side of the crossing on September 5, and that it would remain closed until the damage was repaired.

Israel has enforced an air, land and sea blockade on Gaza for more than a decade, but grants permission to a limited number of people to cross. An average of about 1,000 Gazans cross through Erez each day, mostly those in need of medical care, but also businesspe­ople, students and others, Israeli authoritie­s say. A second crossing with Israel, Kerem Shalom, is for goods only.

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 ??  ?? A Palestinia­n resident with her children in Khan Al Ahmar as Israeli law paves the way for the demolition of their village AFP
A Palestinia­n resident with her children in Khan Al Ahmar as Israeli law paves the way for the demolition of their village AFP

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