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Written by ISABEL KERSHNER ISABEL KERSHNER
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Category: News News
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Published: 03 November 2008 03 November 2008
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Last Updated: 03 November 2008 03 November 2008
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Created: 03 November 2008 03 November 2008
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Among the measures Mr. Olmert proposed for curbing the violence were an
increase in law enforcement personnel, arrests and timely trials; the
use of administrative detention and restraining orders against settlers
who break the law; and a halt to public financing of the illegal
outposts.
In the West Bank not including East Jerusalem, there are at least 120
official settlements with more than 260,000 Jewish residents. Most of
the international community views all Jewish construction in the areas
conquered by Israel in the 1967 war as illegal; the United States
regards the settlements as an obstacle to peace.
A 2005 report on the outposts found widespread collusion among
officials in successive governments to spend state funds to build
outposts, in contravention of stated policy and law. The report was
commissioned, under pressure from Washington, by Ariel Sharon, then the
prime minister, and was researched and written by Talia Sasson, a
former state prosecutor.
Asked what sort of government funds were still making their way to the
outposts, Mark Regev, a spokesman for Mr. Olmert, referred to the
Sasson report and to government financing of settler regional councils
in the West Bank. He said that the government would “have to be more
careful” about where public funds were going.
Dani Dayan, the chairman of the Yesha Council, an umbrella organization
that represents the settlers, attacked Mr. Olmert’s announcement about
financing as “collective punishment” and said that politicians were
mounting a campaign of incitement and demonization against the settlers
before the national elections set for Feb. 10.
Mr. Dayan said that the only government investment in the outposts
today was indirect, in the form of the regional council funds, which go
to services like garbage collection and school buses. “Does this mean
that they won’t clear the garbage?” Mr. Dayan asked, adding that he
hoped “this bad government will be replaced with a better one in four
months.”