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BEIJING, June 9 (Xinhuanet) -- Israeli Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon lost his parliamentary majority on Tuesday but seemed in no
immediate danger of being toppled after the head of a pro-settler party quit the
cabinet over a Gaza pullout plan, said Wednesday's China Daily.
Housing
Minister Effi Eitam, leader of the National Religious Party (NRP), and deputy
minister Yitzhak Levy of the NRP tendered their resignations to Sharon, who
controlled 61 of parliament's 120 seats before the two abandoned him.
 Israeli Housing Minister Effi
Eitam (L) and deputy minister Yitzhak Levy leave a news conference in
Jerusalem June 8, 2004 after they tendered their resignations to Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. The far-right minister and his deputy quit
Sharon's cabinet in protest against his Gaza pullout plan.
[Reuters] | But the NRP's four other legislators
made no immediate decision to bolt the coalition and were weighing a compromise
to keep the party in the government for at least three more months.
That would grant Sharon, once considered godfather of Jewish settlements on
occupied land, a temporary reprieve from total breakdown of his coalition that
would force him to reshape his government or call elections.
"From this moment on, we have 59 Knesset members in the coalition," Gideon
Saar, head of Sharon's Likud party in parliament, told Channel One television.
But Saar noted there was still no unified bloc in parliament able to muster
the 61 votes required to bring down the government in a no-confidence vote.
SAFETY NET
Israeli political commentators said the Labour Party led by Shimon Peres
was likely to spread a safety net under Sharon, backing the former general in
parliament from the opposition benches, to ensure plans for a Gaza pullout go
ahead.
Boosting Sharon, Labour withdrew a no-confidence motion on Monday, a day
after the cabinet approved in principle the proposal to remove all 21 Jewish
settlements in Gaza and four of the 120 in the West Bank.
In Gaza City, Israeli helicopters fired missiles at what the military said
was a workshop containing weapons used by Palestinian militants against Israeli
civilians.
Witnesses said motorbikes were manufactured at the workshop and that two
people passing by were wounded.
The air strike was launched hours after a rocket fired by militants in the
Gaza Strip exploded on a road in the southern Israeli town of Sderot. Five
people were treated for shock.
"As a comrade in arms, a cabinet colleague and a brother of the Jewish
people, I call upon you Mr Prime Minister: 'Stop! don't hand the country over to
terror'." Eitam, a former army officer, wrote in his resignation letter.
Sharon's government has been in the grips of a political crisis since his
cabinet voted 14-7 on Sunday in favor of a watered-down version of his
U.S.-backed proposal to "disengage" from conflict with the Palestinians.
Palestinians welcome any Israeli withdrawal but fear Sharon is trying to
trade impoverished Gaza for large swathes of the West Bank where most of the
240,000 Jewish settlers live.
U.S. President Bush backed Sharon's plan as a way of reviving a
stalled international peace "road map" for the Middle East, but angered
Palestinians seeking their own state by saying Israel could keep chunks of the
West Bank.
Sharon pushed the plan through the cabinet only after firing two ultra
nationalist ministers and placating Likud dissidents by agreeing not to evacuate
settlements for at least nine months and then in four phases, each requiring a
vote.
Opponents of the withdrawal say Palestinian militants would regard it as a
victory after more then three years of bloodshed.
If the plan is carried out, it would mark Israel's first removal of
settlements in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, territories captured in the 1967
Middle East war.
Polls show a majority of Israelis willing to part with Gaza's
hard-to-defend settlements, where 7,500 Jews live cloistered from 1.3 million
Palestinians. But Sharon's Likud party rejected his pullout plan in a May 2
referendum.
(China Daily/Agencies) |