The neutrality of this article is disputed. The reader should keep in mind that the timeline below gives only a partial account of events.
This is a incomplete timeline of events in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. See also Israeli-Palestinian conflict external references for news stories.
Hilltop 26, an illegal Israeli settlement near the city of
Hebron, is peacefully dismantled by the
Israel Defence Force.
Rachel Corrie, an
American member of the
International Solidarity Movement is crushed by an
Israel Defence Forces bulldozer[?], becoming the first ISM member to die in the conflict. Eyewitnesses allege murder, while Israel calls it a "regrettable accident".
Six Palestinians were killed and about 50 injured as Isreali forces entered the refugee camp Rafah in southern Gaza strip. A 12 year old boy and two elderly women were among the casualties. The incident started when armed Palestinians opened fire on a Isreali bulldozer, according to the news agency
AP.
Isreali soldiers killed two Palestinian boys and Palestinians killed one Israeli soldier in a shooting in Nablus. In Gaza a Palestinian man was killed as Isrealis answered to an ambush.
At least three Palestinians killed as Isreali helicopters open fire on two cars in the city of Gaza.
Marwan Barghouti, captured
April 15, was indicted in a civilian Israeli court.
Israeli forces killed 6 Palestinians in response to the attacks of August 4. Israeli undercover soldiers killed four Palestinian militants and wounded three in a gun-fight in
Tulkarm[?]. An Israeli sniper killed
Hussam Hamdan[?], a member of
Hamas in the
Gaza Strip. Israeli troops and 30 tanks pushed into northern Gaza, killing a Palestinian policeman.
A Palestinian
suicide bombing claimed 9 lives, near
Safed[?]; a shooting attack in
Jerusalem killed two; an attack upon a
Israeli settlement family killed the parents. Not all of the victims of these attacks were Israeli Jews; some were Israeli Arabs and
Druze.
In an interview with the British newspaper the Independent, Yasser Arafat's chief political representative in Jerusalem, Professor Sari Nusseibeh, condemned suicide bombings as "immoral". He said that the Palestinians have a right to resist the Israeli occupation but that violence was not the way. "The use of violence as a means of solving problems is demeaning to us as human beings", he said. "Attacking civilians of any kind anywhere is totally unacceptable". While this is only a minority view, commentators considered it significant that a senior representative of the PLO denounced all violence against civilians, including against Israeli settlers. No other Palestinian leader declared support to a non-violent conclusion of the conflict.
Fifteen Palestinians (including nine children) were killed, by an American-built F-16 Israeli jet which bombed a densely populated residential area of Gaza City. Among the innocent children killed, Mohammed al-Huwaiti was aged 4, his brother Subhi was aged 3, Ayman Mattar was only 1 and little Dunya Rami Mattar only 3 months. The victims included Salah Shehade[?] (the leader of Hamas's military wing, the Izz ad-Din el-Qasam Brigades), and more than 100 others were wounded. The United Nations condemned this as a flagrant violation of international law. Two days later, Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, Israel's minister of defense, claimed that Shehade had been "engaged" in planning an act of "mega-terror", involving the blowing-up of a truck loaded with a ton of explosives and capable of leading to hundreds of Israelis dead.
Although Ariel Sharon described Shahade's death, as "one of our biggest successes", some claim that it did not serve Israel's interest so well, as it came a few hours after the spiritual leader of Hamas, Ahmed Yassin, offered to halt all suicide attacks in exchange for full Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank and Gaza Strip, in effect to the 1967 borders. However, shortly after the strike, masked Hamas militants vowed to wreak revenge on Israel, so it seemed unlikely that his offer still stood. It is not clear to what extent Yassin was committed to his offer.
9 people killed (one of them an infant born immediately after the attack) in a shooting attack near the settlement of Emmanuel. A similar attack, also fatal, happened at the same place just 7 months earlier. A day later, three civilians killed in a suicide bombing on the Tel-Aviv Old Bus Station.
A mother, her three sons and a neighbor coming to her rescue killed in an infiltration into the Itamar settlement.
19 people killed and 74 injured in a suicide bombing on the 32A bus in
Jerusalem. The next day, 7 more killed in a suicide bombing on a crowded bus stop in the French Hill area.
14.5-year-old girl killed in a suicide bombing in the coastal city of Herzliya.
A civilian, a couple and their unborn baby all killed in an infiltration into the Karmei Zur settlement.
17 people killed and 38 injured on a suicide bombing (by the means of a kamikaze-driven car) of the 830 bus on the
Megiddo junction.
Three high school yeshiva students killed in an infiltration into the Itamar settlement.
Two people killed in a suicide bombing in Rishon le-Zion. Five days later, an infant and her grandmother killed in a suicide bombing in Petah Tikva.
A
suicide bomber disguised as an Israeli soldier kills at least two Israelis and wounds more than 50 in
Netanya[?].
Shin Bet[?] officials announces they have arrested six Israelis for conspiring to bomb Palestinian schools in April, including
Noam Federman[?], a leader of the
Kach movement of the late Rabbi
Meir Kahane, and
Menashe Levenger[?], son of Rabbi
Moshe Levenger[?], a founder of the
Hebron settlement.
Muhammad al-Madani[?], governor of
Bethlehem, leaves the
Church of the Nativity.
Israel calls up additional reserve forces and moves tanks into position for an expected incursion into Gaza in retaliation for the most recent suicide bombing.
A palestinian
suicide bomber badly injures himself near
Megiddo, southeast of
Haifa, when the explosives he was carrying go off prematurely.
A Palestinian
suicide bomber kills 15 and wounds 58 in a billiards and gambling club in
Rishon le Zion[?] at approximately 11 pm local time, while Ariel Sharon is meeting with President Bush in Washington D.C.
In April, a total of 311 Palestinians and 58 Israelis were killed, most during Israel's West Bank offensive.
A suicide bomber kills 4 Israelis and 2 Chinese workers at the entrance to the
Mahaneh Yehuda[?] market in
Jerusalem.
A bus bombing kills 8 Israelis in
Haifa.
Israeli troops occupy
Bethlehem. Dozens of armed Palestinian gunmen, many of whom Israel has identified as terrorists, occupy the
Church of the Nativity and hold the church and its clergy hostage.
Israeli troops exchange gunfire with guards of
Yasir Arafat in
Ramallah. A
suicide bomber identified as
Shadi Tubasi[?], a resident of the refugee camp
Jenin, kills 15 and wounds more than 40 in an Arab-owned restaurant in
Haifa. Later, a suicide bomber wounds four members of an
intensive care unit[?], one critically, in a paramedics' dispatch station in
Efrat[?]. In the past 18 months, according to the
Associated Press, 1262 people have been killed on the Palestinian side and on 401 on the Israeli side; in March, 259 Palestinians and 130 Israelis were killed.
A
suicide bomber explodes in My Coffee Shop, a
Tel Aviv café at around 9:30 PM local time, wounding 32 people. President George W. Bush and Secretary of State Colin Powell (USA) call on
Yasir Arafat to condemn the wave of suicide bombings in Arabic, to his own people. Israeli spokespeople make similar demands. Arafat goes on television and swears in Arabic that he will "die a martyr, a martyr, a martyr". Members of Arafat's personal Al-Aqsa brigade state that they will refuse any form of cease-fire, and that they will continue suicide bombings of civilians in Israel.
Israeli forces begin
Operation Defensive Shield[?], an incursion into the
West Bank.
At the start of
Passover, a
suicide bomber kills 28 and injures more than 100 in the Park Hotel in
Netanya[?] during
seder.
A bus bombing kills 7 Israelis at the
Musmus[?] junction in
Umm el-Fahm[?].
Israeli forces continue the raid on
Ramallah and other
West Bank towns. A helicopter attack near
Tulkarmkills[?] Mutasen Hammad[?] and two bystanders. A bomb in
Gaza destroys an Israeli tank which was escorting settlers, killing 3 soldiers and wounding 2. A taxi in
Tulkarm[?] explodes, killing 4 Palestinians. Palestinians execute two accused collaborators in
Bethlehem, planning to hang one of the corpses near the
Church of the Nativity until Palestinian police stop them.
A. Raffaele Ciriello[?], an Italian photographer, is killed by Israeli forces in
Ramallah.
The U.S. pushes through the passage of U.N. Resolution 1397[?] by the Security Council, demanding an "immediate cessation of all acts of violence" and "affirming a vision of a region where two states, Israel and Palestine, live side by side within secure and recognized borders".
Israeli forces invade the
Jabaliya[?] refugee camp and
Ramallah, killing at least 17 residents and wounding 45.
A
suicide bomber kills 11 Israelis at
Cafe Moment[?] in
Jerusalem, across the street from the official residence of
Ariel Sharon.
A
suicide bomber kills 9 Israelis in an
ultra-Orthodox[?] neighborhood in
Jerusalem.
Tourism Minister
Rechavam Ze'evy[?] is assassinated in
Jerusalem by the
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.
Ariel Sharon of the
Likud Party[?] is elected Prime Minister.
Prime Minister
Ehud Barak resigns.
Israeli Opposition Leader
Ariel Sharon visits the
Temple Mount which is administered by a Muslim organization. The visit results in violent confrontations between Muslims and Israeli Police.
The
Camp David Summit between
Ehud Barak and
Yassir Arafat demonstrates both parties' unwillingness to make futher comprimizes.
The Israeli Army withdraws from southern
Lebanon, in compliance with
U.N. Resolution 425[?].
Ehud Barak of the
Labour Party[?] is elected Prime Minister.
Benjamin Netanyahu and
Yassir Arafat sign the
Wye River Memorandum[?] at a summit in
Maryland hosted by
Bill Clinton.
Benjamin Netanyahu of the
Likud Party[?] is elected Prime Minister.
Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin is assassinated in
Tel Aviv by Jewish extremist
Yigal Amir[?].
Shimon Peres assumes the position of acting Prime Minister.
Interim Agreement on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip signed in
Washington, DC.
Yitzhak Rabin,
Shimon Peres and
Yassir Arafat are awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize.
Israeli forces withdraw from
Jericho and
Gaza City in compliance with the
Oslo accords.
Yassir Arafat and
Yitzak Rabin sign the
Declaration of Principles on Interim Self-Government in
Oslo.
Yitzak Rabin of the
Labour Party[?] elected Prime Minister.
Tel Aviv is hit by 40
Scud missles lauched by
Iraq during the
Persian Gulf War.
The
First Intifada begins. Violence continues until the 1993
Oslo Accords.
The Israeli Army withdraws from most of
Lebanon.
Israel enters southern
Lebanon to remove
PLO forces.
Heavily armed
PLO forces move into southern
Lebanon, which they use as a base for attacks against Israel.
Menachem Begin and
Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat and sign the
Camp David Accord, with Israel agreeing to withdraw from the
Sinai Peninsula and to a framework for future negotiation over the
West Bank and
Gaza Strip.
Menachem Begin of the
Likud Party[?] is elected Prime Minister, ending nearly 30 years of rule by the
Labour Party[?].
The
Yom Kippur War.
Syria and
Egypt attack Israeli forces in the
Golan Heights and the
Sinai Peninsula.
The
Six-Day War.
Israel launches a pre-emptive strike agaist the
Egyptian Air Force on suspicion that Egypt and
Syria are plannig to invade. Israel defeat the combined forces of Egypt, Syria and
Jordan and capture the
Sinai Peninsula and the
Gaza Strip from Egypt, East
Jerusalem and the
West Bank from Jordan, and the
Golan Heights from Syria.
The
Palestine Liberation Organization is founded in
Cairo with
Yassir Arafat as its leader.
Israel withdraws its forces from the
Sinai Peninsula, ending the
Suez Crisis.
Israel invades
Egypt's
Sinai Peninsula in secret alliance with
France and
Britain.
Israel concludes
Armistice Agreements with neighbouring countries. The territory of the
British Mandate of Palestine is divided between the State of Israel, the
Kingdom of the Jordan and
Egypt.
Lebanon,
Syria,
Iraq,
Egypt and local Arabs attack the new Jewish state. The resulting
war lasts 13 months.
Israel declares
Independence from
British rule.
The
UN General Assembly passes a
Partition Plan dividing the
British Mandate of Palestine into two states.
In an effort to end the
Great Uprising[?], the
Peel Commission[?] limits Jewish immigration to Palestine to 12,000 per year.
Arab delegates from throughout Palestine declare a general strike to protest British rule, thus starting the
Great Uprising[?] .
The
League of Nations grants
Britain a mandate to administer
Palestine.
British forces occupy
Jerusalem.
British foreign affairs minister
Arthur James Balfour sends a letter to
Lord Rothschild[?], President of the
Zionist Federation[?], declaring his government's intent to establish "a national home for the Jewish people" in Palestine.
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