News | 2 Tammuz 5768, July 5, '08 | |
![]() Who provides protection? ![]() Check It Out More ![]() | Published: 04/27/08, 1:02 PM IDF Guards Replaced by Private Firmsby Hillel Fendel (IsraelNN.com) In the latest in a series of decisions making Jewish life in Judea and Samaria more difficult, the army is leaving 40 towns. The IDF is transferring the responsibility for protecting 40 Jewish towns in Judea and Samaria (Yesha) to private firms, and withdrawing protection altogether from ten others. The Yesha Council's Security Officer, Shlomo Vaknin, says, "The government is privatizing our security." Recent decisions affecting the personal and communal safety in Yesha towns include the following:
In addition, many checkpoints at which Arabs are checked for - and often found to be carrying - weapons have been removed. Furthermore, permission has been granted for more Arab policemen to bear arms in PA-controlled cities, and some 20 armored vehicles will be transferred to PA control in the near future. Eldad: The Policy is to Push Jews Out of Yesha The latest decision affects 40 towns categorized as "Special Security Situation Towns." Though considered to be the most threatened communities in Yesha, the army plans to give security control there over to private security firms. Among the affected towns are Kiryat Arba, Telem, Adura, and Mevo Dotan. The army claims that the soldiers who have traditionally been posted there - generally in their first weeks of basic training - are not as well-trained as private companies' security guards. In addition, ten towns currently on the "Israeli" side of the partition wall/fence - such as Shaked and Hinanit in the Shomron - will have their protection removed altogether. The thinking is that the wall provides sufficient protection against terrorist infiltrations. Vaknin totally disagrees: "The wall doesn't stop the terrorists, who get through either by dressing as day-workers or by infiltrating at night." Click here to receive our free Daily Israel Report © A7 Syndications - This article may not be republished freely. Written and oral arrangements prior to April, 2007 must be reconfirmed. If you are republishing A7 material, please contact us promptly.
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