The ministerial committee on security affairs has approved an operational plan to deal with the phenomenon of suicide attackers. The ministers were also briefed today on the growing trend to volunteer for suicide missions among the PA public.



The recommendations include the deporting or court-trial of terrorist family members who had advance knowledge of attacks, demolition of terrorist homes, and the withholding of stipends to terrorist relatives. Action will also be taken against mosque preachers who spread incitement, and marches in honor of suicide terrorists will be banned.



The Cabinet decided today on the first deportation: that of a relative of one of the terrorists who committed the recent bus attack outside Emanuel in which nine Jews were slaughtered. The move met with the approval of Attorney-General Rubenstein and the justice system. The army says this will be a test case, and that the talk of deportation has already borne fruit, as a father turned in his would-be suicide terrorist son. "The goal is to encourage those families who don't want their home to be destroyed or their family to be exiled to Gaza," said an army source.