Rabin is the daughter of former Prime Minister Yitzchak Rabin, who was assassinated in 1995 during the Oslo Accord talks. "We cannot stand aside quietly and wait until something happens," she stated.
She joined the Adam organization, which demanded the government take the weapons out of fear that they will be used by a "new Jewish underground movement."
The organization is arranging a rally in Rabin Square Friday afternoon against incitement and violence. "Rabin Square should not have to be called Sharon Square," said an Adam organizer Yuval Albshan.
Knesset member Amir Peretz (Am Ehad) asserted that weapons should be allowed only to residents who are involved directly in security. "It is true that it is impossible to take them all and that we are talking only about fringe extremists, but when the evacuation begins, it is illogical not to take away their guns," he added.
Poet Nathan Zar warned that "since they are always threatening there will be a civil war, we have to confiscate their weapons. They chose to live dangerously, but no one asked them to live there," he added.
A somewhat dissenting voice came from Rabin's former spokesman Aliza Goren, who said that "inasmuch as there are liable to be terror attacks by Arabs, I wouldn’t abandon [the Judea, Samaria and Gaza residents] altogether." But she added that everything must be done to prevent shedding of blood.
She joined the Adam organization, which demanded the government take the weapons out of fear that they will be used by a "new Jewish underground movement."
The organization is arranging a rally in Rabin Square Friday afternoon against incitement and violence. "Rabin Square should not have to be called Sharon Square," said an Adam organizer Yuval Albshan.
Knesset member Amir Peretz (Am Ehad) asserted that weapons should be allowed only to residents who are involved directly in security. "It is true that it is impossible to take them all and that we are talking only about fringe extremists, but when the evacuation begins, it is illogical not to take away their guns," he added.
Poet Nathan Zar warned that "since they are always threatening there will be a civil war, we have to confiscate their weapons. They chose to live dangerously, but no one asked them to live there," he added.
A somewhat dissenting voice came from Rabin's former spokesman Aliza Goren, who said that "inasmuch as there are liable to be terror attacks by Arabs, I wouldn’t abandon [the Judea, Samaria and Gaza residents] altogether." But she added that everything must be done to prevent shedding of blood.