Israel
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Israel and Occupied Palestine
Territories in links
Date: 19 October, 2004
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Top: The flags of Israel and the
Palestine
Above: The separation wall in Bethlehem. Photo: Christian
Aid/Simon Townsley
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News of fresh violence from either Israel
or the Occupied Palestinian Territories* comes in daily - but what
are the core issues? News in Links briefly recaps the history and
origins of the conflict. By Andrew Chapman
To read more about a particular part of this
report, click on the words in orange. This will take you to another
website. To return to this page, click on your browser's Back button
Note: *The Occupied Palestinian Territories include
the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem - territories that
Israel occupied in the 1967 war (see below) and refused to return
after hostilities ended.
Israel has scaled
down its biggest invasion of the northern Gaza Strip since the
beginning of the Palestinian uprising four years ago.
The conflict over land between the Mediterranean
and the River Jordan is an ancient
one, and definitions are difficult.
The definition of 'Palestine' has varied
greatly over the last two millennia, from the Roman
province of Syria-Palestine to the establishment of the Palestinian
Authority in 1993 and the proposed state
of Palestine, which includes land currently occupied by Israel,
particularly the Gaza
Strip and the West
Bank.
The name derives from the ancient enemies of
the Hebrews, the Philistines.
The area became predominantly populated by Arabs from the 7th century.
Israel itself was only established in modern times as a nation
state in 1948, in the wake of British and French control of
the regions that had been part of the Turkish Ottoman
Empire.
Israel is regarded as the spiritual home of the
Jews, who were expelled by the Romans in the 2nd century AD. From
the late 19th century, the Zionist
movement campaigned for the return of the Jews to this area and
the creation of a defined national homeland where the ancient Kingdom
of Israel had been.
Maps
A series of maps on the BBC website shows how
the ownership of this region has changed:after the collapse of the
Ottoman Empire, the area was controlled by Britain
and France.
From the 1920s to 1948, Israel, the West Bank,
the Gaza Strip and Jordan
formed 'Mandate Palestine' and Transjordan.
Palestine was partitioned
on paper in 1947, with areas defined for Arab and Jewish communities
and Jerusalem to be international, but when Britain withdrew in
1948, war broke out - the West Bank and Gaza were defined by an
armistice line.
From 1948-1967, the West Bank was ruled
by Jordan, and the Gaza Strip by Egypt
In the Six-Day
War of 1967, Israel occupied the Palestinian territories, as
well as the Golan Heights (part of Syria)
and the Egyptian Sinai
Peninsula. Sinai was returned to Egypt in 1979.
The Gaza
Strip is currently home to an estimated 1.2 million Palestinians,
and around 5,000 Jewish settlers.
The West
Bank is home to around 2.2 million Palestinians and 400,000
Israeli settlers.
Population
Israel itself has a population of 6.7 million,
of whom around 1.3 million are Israeli Arabs. In 2002, Israel reoccupied
most of the West Bank, after a series of Palestinian suicide
attacks.
In 2003, the 'quartet' of the United Nations,
the European Union, Russia and the United States published the 'roadmap',
a proposal for peaceful Middle East settlement.
The BBC presents constantly
updated news from the area.
Many Israeli
and Palestinian
political resources are available online.
Christian Aid has a dedicated spotlight
on the Middle East with further news and information on the
region and its conflicts.
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