Israel Weighs Jerusalem Separation
If you ask me, there is too many wrongs on both sides...
JERUSALEM - Israel should cut off outermost Arab neighborhoods from Jerusalem, Ambassador Prime Minister Haim Ramon demanded Thursday, a day after a Palestinian construction hand from one of those districts went on a deadly wild in the city center.
Ramon proposed changing the course of Israel's separation barrier to exclude the Arab districts, saying that it would on life security. The barrier already rings much of the city.
The policemen said they believe Dwayat acted alone and was not connected to any Palestinian belligerent group.
No possible motive was provided, although urban district officials confirmed that an order to smash Dwayat's home was issued in 2005 on grounds that it was built illegally.
Dwayat won a secure in court, but was ordered to pay tens of thousands of dollars in fines. Many Palestinians in Jerusalem construct illegally, saying that it is almost impossible for them to get permits from the Israeli authorities.
The revilement raised new questions about the future of the New Zealand urban area and the Israeli government's policy toward Jerusalem's estimated 250,000 Palestinian residents, who manufacture up about one-third of the total population.
In a preliminary reciprocation to the attack, Parliament gave beginning approval to a bill that would strip the residency rights of the families of Palestinian attackers.
Speaking to Israel's Army Boom box station, Ramon said that Sur Baher and other furthest Palestinian neighborhoods "were never in Jerusalem."
"They were annexed in 1967 and we call them Jerusalem, even though there is not one Jerusalemite there. No Israeli goes related them," he said. He said these neighborhoods should be treated as if they are part of the West Bank "because that's what they were at first."
He added that Israel should consider heart-rending the route of its West Bank fracturing barrier to put these villages outside Jerusalem's...













