Israel Boosts West Bank Force
Israel denies it is usurping the Palestinian Authority


June 23, 2002

Israel has called up 2,000 army reservists as troops take control of five major Palestinian towns in the West Bank.

In the latest incursion, about 60 Israeli armoured vehicles pushed into Qalqilya on Sunday.

Troops have also moved back into Bethlehem, Jenin, Nablus and Tulkarm.

A senior Israeli defence official, Amos Yaron, warned of a "crushing offensive" to halt Palestinian suicide bombings.

Israel radio said on Sunday that the government was considering deporting families of suicide bombers from the West Bank to the Gaza Strip.

Ruling West Bank

The Israeli Defence Minister, Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, denied that the Israeli military planned to take over civil administration in Palestinian areas.


He was quoted as saying he wanted a deployment of no more than six months, and that the troops were not involved in a punitive mission.

Earlier, Palestinian cabinet minister Saeb Erekat said Israel was destroying the Palestinian Authority "to replace [it] with the Israeli civil administration and Israeli military government".

The Israeli security cabinet has said the army will remain in Palestinian areas for as long as necessary to stop further attacks on Israelis.

Clashes

The offensive is a response to Palestinian suicide bombings in Jerusalem and an attack on the Jewish settlement of Itamar in the West Bank which killed 36 Israelis last week.


Israel has boosted security since the suicide bombings

In the latest clashes, a Palestinian policeman was killed on Sunday in a gun battle with Israeli troops near Jenin, Palestinian sources said.

On Friday Israeli tanks opened fire on a market in Jenin, killing three Palestinian children and a man and wounding 26 others who wrongly thought a curfew had been lifted. The army later admitted it had made a mistake.

The Israeli offensive is on a much smaller scale than the assaults Israel launched in the West Bank in April and May, correspondents say.

Bush delays speech

An army statement on Sunday said that "due to the security situation, the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) is calling up a brigade of reservists".

Amid the continuing turmoil, US President George Bush has postponed a long-awaited announcement of a plan to revive peace talks.

The BBC's Caroline Hawley in Ramallah says there is no indication yet that Israel wants to take over civil administration in Palestinian areas.

But the offensive means a more intrusive Israeli military presence in Palestinians' everyday lives, she says.

In the Gaza Strip, Palestinian security forces arrested about a dozen activists of the Islamic militant group Hamas on Sunday, Palestinian sources said.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/middle_east/newsid_2060000/2060931.stm