JERUSALEM – In the largest rally here since Israel's Gaza withdrawal this past summer, upwards of 100,000 people gathered in Jerusalem's town center to protest the use of excessive force allegedly employed last week against protesters during the evacuation of Jewish homes in northern Samaria.
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The massive event, organized over the weekend, also decried acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's stated policy of withdrawing Jewish communities from the West Bank.
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"Yes it's correct, Olmert is bad for the Jews ... Olmert wants to shed Jewish blood and we won't let him. We'll remove him from office on election day," shouted Israeli nationalist lawmaker Uri Ariel while addressing the crowd.
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Ariel, along with other prominent speakers, demanded the establishment of a special committee to investigate what he said was police brutality against hundreds of protesters during the demolition last Wednesday of nine Jewish homes in the West Bank town of Amona.
Olmert today rejected the call for an official inquiry, which was also voiced by Israeli President Moshe Katsav and multiple members of Knesset.
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![]() Israel forces clash with Jewish settlers in the West Bank (courtesy: Israel National News) |
Last week, more than 1,500 Israeli Defense Force soldiers and Israeli police officers were called up to demolish the Amona homes after the court system ruled the houses were constructed without a permit.
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The government said the homes could be rebuilt at a later date in the same community if the construction is coordinated with the Ministry of Defense. But Olmert ordered the demolitions be carried out immediately and instructed the military to use "all force necessary."
During the demolitions, horse-mounted police, water cannons and specially trained riot officers faced off against hundreds of protesters who massed in Amona in hopes of halting the efforts.
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![]() Knesset Member Effie Eitam evacuated after suffering head injury in clash with Israeli forces (courtesy: Israel National News) |
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Israeli television broadcast live footage of demonstrators, including women and children, being dragged and beaten by soldiers. Teenagers with bloody noses and head wounds were seen being removed from the scene. Police were videotaped using batons and gas canisters to clear the area of demonstrators.
More than 300 protesters were treated in makeshift first aid tents. At least 70 were evacuated to Jerusalem hospitals with moderate-to-serious injuries.
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Three Israeli nationalist lawmakers, Effie Eitam, Benny Elon and Aryeh Eldad were seriously wounded in the clashes. Eitam suffered a head injury after being pushed by soldiers. He was undergoing neurological tests in Jerusalem. Elon was injured after reportedly being pushed off a bulldozer by troops. Eldad sustained an arm fracture after being shoved to the ground by police.
"I promise you, the evening before the events in Amona, Olmert held consultations in which he ordered the police and the army to break our heads and our legs. He is the messenger, he and no other. A commission of inquiry is the only solution for the unity of the people. Olmert fears a commission of inquiry because it could put him in prison," protest organizer Pinchas Wallerstein of Israel's Yesha Settlers Council said at today's rally.
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"The Amona evacuation was a horrid scene to watch on television," said protester Andrew Greenberg, who described himself to WND as an "extreme leftist and no friend of settlers."
"Any ordinary viewer could easily see the police were clearly brutalizing the protesters big time. It's unquestionable," Goldberg said.
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The demonstrators today filled up Jerusalem's Zion Square near the city's center and stretched several city blocks. Images of protesters being beaten by Israeli police during last week's demilitions were broadcast on large screens. Speakers blasted Olmert and held a prayer session for those wounded in Amona.
Protest organizers said at least 100,000 Israelis were present. Israel's leading newspaper Yediot Aharonot reported "large numbers" attended. The Haaretz daily described "thousands of right wing demonstrators." The Jerusalem Post claimed the numbers were "tens of thousands." Police estimates of the crowd obtained by WND put the numbers at 90,000. Traditionally Israeli police estimates of rallies tend to caution on the lower side.
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"We came here to express our extreme disappointment with the Olmert government. Not just against Amona but also for his clear policies to withdraw Jews from the West Bank," protester Josh Klein told WND.
Analysts here viewed the Amona home demolitions as part of a larger campaign to withdraw from the West Bank.
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Some Israeli commentators have been questioning the timing of the demolition orders, which came as Olmert begins to launch his Kadima Party's political campaign after official installation last month as party chairman. The commentators say Olmert will need to demonstrate he is capable of carrying out the policies of Kadima in absence of its founder, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, who remains comatose in a Jerusalem hospital following a severe stroke.
Many Kadima members have stated the new party is looking to change Israel's borders.
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Olmert has expressed approval of West Bank withdrawals and has made statements to reporters about the possibility of vacating certain peripheral areas of Jerusalem.
Also Olmert, who previously served as mayor of Jerusalem, was the first Sharon deputy to go public with the Gaza-withdrawal plan.
The West Bank is considered landlocked territory not officially recognized as part of any country. Israel calls the land "disputed." The United Nations claims the West Bank is "occupied" by Israel, which maintains overall control of most of the area while the Palestinian Authority has jurisdiction in about 40 percent. The Palestinians claim a population of roughly 2.4 million, but new demographic studies show the numbers likely are inflated. The actual Palestinian population could be up to 1 million less.
The territory remained under Jordanian rule from 1948 until Israel captured the West Bank in 1967 after Jordan's King Hussein ignored Israeli pleas for his country to stay out of the Six Day War. Most countries rejected Jordan's initial claim on the area, which it formally renounced in 1988.
The West Bank borders most of Israel's major cities, including Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Military strategists long have estimated Israel must maintain the West Bank to defend its borders from any ground invasion.
Many villages in the West Bank, which Israelis commonly refer to as the "biblical heartland," are mentioned throughout the Old Testament.
The Book of Genesis says Abraham entered Israel at Shechem (Nablus) and received God's promise of land for his offspring. He later was buried in Hebron.
The nearby town of Beit El, anciently called Bethel meaning "house of God," is where Scripture says the patriarch Jacob slept on a stone pillow and dreamed of angels ascending and descending a stairway to heaven. In that dream, God spoke directly to Jacob and reaffirmed the promise of territory.
And in Exodus, the holy tabernacle rested in Shilo, believed to be the first area the ancient Israelites settled after fleeing Egypt.
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