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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Sharon orders pullout from camp


Israeli soldiers talk Thursday next to army tanks near the Jewish settlement of Elei Sinai near the Palestinian town of Beit Lahiya in the Gaza Strip. Israeli tanks and bulldozers pulled back from Beit Lahiya on Thursday.Israeli soldiers talk Thursday next to army tanks near the Jewish settlement of Elei Sinai near the Palestinian town of Beit Lahiya in the Gaza Strip. Israeli tanks and bulldozers pulled back from Beit Lahiya on Thursday.
 (Associated PressAssociated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Gavin Rabinowitz Associated Press

JERUSALEM – Prime Minister Ariel Sharon late Thursday ordered a troop pullout from a refugee camp, defense officials said, signaling that a two-week offensive in northern Gaza that has left more than 100 Palestinians dead could be easing.

The move came hours after Sharon announced that all 8,200 Jewish settlers will be pulled out of the Gaza Strip starting next summer and the operation will last 12 weeks.

Sharon and Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz ordered a redeployment in northern Gaza, where Israeli forces have been carrying out their largest Gaza operation in four years of fighting. Defense officials said troops were ordered to pull out of the Jebaliya refugee camp.

Army Radio said the redeployment would amount to a pullout from northern Gaza, restoring the situation before the invasion Sept. 30. However, the officials said the army would react quickly if Palestinian militants resume rocket fire at Israeli towns.

The radio station said the Israelis were leaving with new capabilities to spot and hit militants launching rockets, an apparent reference to pilotless drone aircraft Palestinians say have been hovering over the territory, sometimes firing missiles.

Early today, the Israeli air force fired a missile at a group of militants in the Jebaliya camp, critically wounding four, Palestinians said. The military had no comment.

On the settlement issue, the prime minister said next year’s evacuation would be completed within 12 weeks despite opposition from settlers and their backers.

After nightfall Thursday, settlers demonstrated across Israel against the settler pullout. Several thousand gathered near Sharon’s Jerusalem residence.

In Washington, the Bush administration renewed its approval of a planned pullout from Gaza and said the timing was up to Sharon’s government but hoped the withdrawal will be a link to a peace based on the “road map” plan.

The original “unilateral disengagement” plan, approved in June, called for a four-stage pullout beginning in summer 2005. Sharon tried to advance the date to the beginning of 2005, but a month ago reverted to the original formula.

Early Thursday, Israeli tanks and bulldozers pulled back from the Palestinian town of Beit Lahiya after tearing up roads, flattening greenhouses and knocking down dozens of houses.

The two-day foray into the town was part of the Israeli military offensive in the northern Gaza Strip, now in its third week. Five Palestinian militants and an elderly civilian were killed in three missile strikes, starting Wednesday evening.

Since the Sept. 29 start of the campaign, triggered by a Palestinian rocket attack on an Israeli town that killed two small children, 105 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli army fire, about half of them civilians, including 18 under the age of 16.