by Hillel Fendel
(IsraelNN.com) The Knesset held a special session on the ongoing plight
of the 9,000 expellees from Gush Katif and the Shomron. Many MKs
complained about the government's mis-handling of the entire issue,
especially the lack of long-term housing solutions.
MK Uri Ariel (National Union) initiated the session and obtained the
necessary 40 MKs' signatures to obligate the Prime Minister to attend
and respond. "You, Mr. Prime Minister," Ariel said, "who were among
the initiators of the Disengagement, are obligated to be personally
involved in this matter." Ariel also noted the painful matter of youths
who were arrested during Disengagement protests and who now have a
criminal record preventing them from enlisting in elite army units,
becoming lawyers, bearing weapons, and more.
Many expellees met beforehand with the Prime Minister, demanding
explanations as to the continued mis-handling of their housing needs.
The meeting marked one year since the publication of the State
Comptroller's report blaming the government for the sorry state of the
expellees.
Gush Katif Residents Committee head Lior Kalfa said last night, "Where
is the shame? The permanent solutions are not here, to the disgrace of
the government, and the princes of civil rights say nary a word." 85%
of the former Gush Katif residents are still living in temporary sites,
and only 2 out of 26 permanent communities have begun to be built.
Excerpts from MKs' Remarks
MK Ze'ev Elkin (Kadima): "The government has totally failed in this
matter. A dramatic revolution is required in everything having to do
with the treatment of the expellees, and a precise time table must be
set for their move to permanent homes. I call upon the Prime Minister
to appoint a special Cabinet minister, while he's making new
appointments, for this purpose."
MK Yuli Edelstein (Likud): "We spent millions on a cursed campaign that
promised a solution for every resident. Is this considered a solution
for every resident?!"
MK Eitan Cabel (Labor) emphasized his support for the Disengagement,
but said, "I am now totally ashamed" at the disgraceful treatment they
have received. "They were sent there by all Israeli governments,
including Labor... We must relate to them not by political orientation,
but as people. I will do everything I can for their rehabilitation" -
though he did not elaborate. He also called upon the Prime Minister to
do everything necessary to this end.
Why No Forgiveness?
All eyes turned to the Knesset podium when it was ascended by Gush
Katif expellee MK Tzvi Hendel (National Union), who is now living in
Yad Binyamin in a temporary dwelling, together with his neighbors and
friends from Ganei Tal. Hendel said, "I am sometimes asked whether a
bumper sticker sported on many cars, which reads, 'We won't forget and
we won't forgive,' is not too strong and mean-hearted. I explain that
in Judaism, forgiveness has rules. We are called upon to ask
forgiveness every year on Yom Kippur, and we are forgiven only if
certain conditions are fulfilled. For one thing, the person who sinned
must ask forgiveness - and this has not been done in this case.
Secondly, the one who sinned must admit his error and express regret,
and this was not done either. Thirdly, he must commit himself not to
do it again, and neither has this been done! Therefore, under these
circumstances, there is no place for forgiveness regarding the
expulsion."
Finally, Prime Minister Olmert himself took the podium. Appearing to
be trying to stall for time, he began by addressing something Arab MK
Muhammed Barakeh had said earlier: "I would like to say in principle,
following what MK Barakeh said, that [he is right in saying] that the
government did not send people to live anywhere [as MK Cabel had
said]. No one was sent anywhere. However, none of the people in Gush
Katif lived there against the will or policy of the government. The
government was able to stop people from living in places when it wanted
to. It evacuated people from various places, and helped and encouraged
others who lived elsewhere. They are citizens, they lived there
according to law, and they were removed from their homes against their
will; on this there is no dispute."
Olmert Won't Apologize
"I will not apologize for the Disengagement," Olmert then said,
"despite MK Hendel's request, but the fact is that they were evicted
against their will. The State did so in accordance with its policies,
and it is now responsible to find solutions to all the problems that
follow as a result."
"Secondly," Olmert continued, "this session can be held on two planes.
One way is for us to argue over every detail - and if I wanted to, I
could provide many good answers for many of the points raised here by
the MKs who have claims against the government. The picture is
certainly not a one-way street, in no way or form. To say that the
government has done nothing [for the expellees] is totally wrong. It
made hundreds of decisions on this matter, and in a very generous
manner. The reparations paid out are much higher than were ever paid
out - including the concept of 'communal evacuation,' which is much
more expensive than what happened in Sinai."
Upon hearing this, MK Hendel interrupted: "I'll assume you're saying
this out of ignorance." Olmert: "No, it is out of knowledge." Hendel:
"Then it's an outright lie." MK Benny Elon: "Menachem Begin did not
throw them out [from Sinai, in 1982] before their homes were ready - as
opposed to here, where they were thrown out with nothing ready."
Olmert soon continued, "So I don't want to get into all the details,
because I have many good answers. But I will say, unconnected to the
mistakes made by all the sides --" At this point, Hendel yelled out
again, and then at another MK, and Knesset Speaker Yitzchak Cohen of
Shas threatened to remove him from the session; one MK called out, 'You
would remove him even from this session??'
Finally, Olmert continued, "The delays are not caused by the
government, but rather by the bureaucracy put in place by the State of
Israel for these types of issues - and all the righteous MKs who
usually insist on every jot and tittle, yet here they dare to say how
cruel it is, etc., I would advise them not to be so hypocritical."
"Thirdly," Olmert said, "I have instructed all the government bodies
-and MK Ariel knows this - to look into the problems not according to
who is right, but rather how to ease difficulties for these people,
because in the end, no matter what, they were removed from their homes
and we were the ones who made the decision to do it." MK Ariel was then
given permission to interrupt, and said, "Why don't you change the
building and construction law, it costs nothing, it would be a one-time
act, in order to speed up the construction process of the new
communities."
Olmert responded, "I am willing to look into this in a positive light.
I am open to a change of approach in order to speed up the process."
Olmert also said he would speak with the Attorney General regarding a
solution for the Disengagement-protest criminal record of many
youngsters. "We don't want to fight with the evacuees, nor do we have
to answer their every plea, but our hearts and pockets are open, and we
hope to reduce the controversy and pain."
Gush Katif Committee head Lior Kalfa, who was present at the session,
told Arutz-7 afterwards, "We have heard enough talk for two years; the
time has long come for action... I will wait a week or two to see if
something happens - for instance, for the Prime Minister to instruct
that a law be prepared to bypass regular procedures in order to help
the new communities be built without bureacracy. This was done when
one million Russian immigrants came, and it has to be done now."
When reminded that just today, the Knesset voted down a proposal by
Likud MK Michael Eitan to create a committee for this purpose, Kalfa
said, "So you see? We are not optimistic..."
Netanyahu Notes Three Failures
Olmert was followed by Opposition Leader Binyamin Netanyahu, who
emphasized three failures: The first is the government's "treatment of
our uprooted brothers. I was in Nitzan, and I saw the peeling walls -
and behind them, the broken families. The government first took their
houses, and then it took their self-respect... We know the
bureaucracy, Mr. Prime Minister, but it's like a jungle - you just have
to take the governmental machete and smash a way through. But that has
not been done..."
The second failure, Netanyahu said, was one of policy: "When Israel
left Sinai [in 1982], it was done effectively, even if not everyone
agreed with the plan. There are arrangements and supervisory
mechanisms in place, and there is peace, and it worked. But the policy
of unilateral withdrawals, which began [under then-Prime Minister Ehud
Barak] in Lebanon, has simply not worked, neither in Lebanon nor in
Gaza, because whatever area we abandon simply fills up with extremist
Moslem elements. I can tell you, unlike what I have heard here from
some speakers today, there will not be a third example of this policy
[in Judea and Samaria]."
Netanyahu then mentioned the third failure, which he attributed in part
to Ehud Olmert himself: "I have asked myself, what caused these
withdrawals and running away? I believe that there is a failure of
national will, a form of material fatigue. Olmert said in New York,
'We are tired of winning, we are tired of fighting.' ... No one wants
wars, but when they're forced upon us, we have no choice - we must
win. There can be no more 'we are tired.' I don't know how much
longer you'll be in office, Mr. Prime Minister, but in the time you
have left, you must change this theme. We are not tired in any sphere,
and we must make it clear to our enemies that we will defeat them every
arena. All of these three failures must be corrected -- if not by this
government, then by the next one."
The government mustered a strong majority in the Knesset, and the Prime
Minister's announcement was approved by a 55 - 18 vote, with 10
abstentions.
Original
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Special Gush Katif Knesset Session: Where is the Shame?
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