Special report: Palestine-Israel
Relations
JERUSALEM, Nov. 2 (Xinhua) -- Israel's internal security chief Yuval Dis
kin on Sunday said he is "extremely concerned" that extreme right-wing activists
might launch attacks against national leaders, local news service Ynet reported.
The warning from the Shin Bet agency came on the eve of the 13th
anniversary of the assassination of former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, who won
the Nobel Peace Prize in 1994 before he was shot dead by a right-wing radical
who opposed to his signing of the Oslo Accords.
"As the anniversary of the Rabin assassination draws near, the Shin Bet has
spotted among right-wing extremists the readiness to use firearms in order to
halt political proceedings and harm leaders. The Shin Bet is extremely concerned
by this," Dis kin was quoted as telling a weekly cabinet meeting.
Noting the recent rise of settler violence against both Palestinian
residents and Israeli soldiers, caretaker Prime Minister Ehud Olmert was quoted
as saying at the meeting that he would not tolerate the "not so small group of
people who are rebelling and creating anarchy."
Olmert added that the government plans to set up a special team of
ministers to deal with the settler violence and restore law and order.