NEVE DEKALIM, Gaza Strip, Aug. 18, 2005

Largest Gaza Settlement Evacuated

Hundreds Of Pullout Opponents Dragged Out In Defiant Last Stand

  • Play CBS Video Video Ugly Moments In Gaza

    It took a determined and disciplined effort by Israeli troops and police to oust hundreds of Jews zealots from synagogues in the Gaza Strip. Still, the pullout remains on track, David Hawkins reports.

  • Video Confrontation In Gaza

    CBS News RAW: Jewish settlers and supporters from outside the Gaza Strip resist soldiers and band together in communal chants.

  • Video Sides React To Gaza Pullout

    CBS News RAW: Israelis and Palestinians give contrasting views on the forcible evictions of Gaza's Jewish settlers.

    • Israeli police take cover from paint thrown by settlers in Kfar Darom

      Israeli police take cover from paint thrown by settlers in Kfar Darom  (AP)

    • Settlers are sprayed with water cannons by Israeli troops on the rooftop of the synagogue of Kfar Darom

      Settlers are sprayed with water cannons by Israeli troops on the rooftop of the synagogue of Kfar Darom  (AP)

    • Israeli children cry as they speak with an Israeli soldier at the Jewish settlement of Shirat Hayam

      Israeli children cry as they speak with an Israeli soldier at the Jewish settlement of Shirat Hayam  (AP)

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  • Photo Essay Tears In Gaza

    A gallery of photos focusing on the Gaza pullout.

  • In The Spotlight Gaza Disengagement Archive

    Israeli soldiers spar with Jewish settlers as they clear key settlements in the Gaza strip.

  • Interactive Mideast Conflict

    Events, key players and a history of the world's most unstable region.

(CBS/AP) 
On the second day of the forced evacuation of Gaza, troops encountered stiffer resistance than at the start of the operation Wednesday. But security officials said they expected to clear out all 21 Gaza settlements by Tuesday, more than two weeks ahead of schedule.

Residents jeered the forces throughout the day, driving several soldiers to tears. "You're right. Cry like we are crying," shouted one settler who was loaded onto a bus, still wearing his white prayer shawl. By midday, 200 people had been removed, the army said.

Noga Cohen, who had three children maimed in a Palestinian shooting attack on a bus, said Israel was surrendering to Palestinian militants. On the door of her house was a sign. "In the event you knock on the door, you are a direct partner in the most terrible crime in the history of the nation of Israel."

"Why did you become a soldier? To be in this crazy situation?" screamed a young mother in Kfar Darom, cradling a baby, as soldiers entered her home.

In another house, a husband and wife lay on the floor, shrieking and clutching their small children. A soldier participating in the evacuation of a religious school suddenly disobeyed orders and was quickly carried away by troops.

Troops also burst into a nursery school crowded with protesters. People sang and danced as the troops entered, and about two dozen young children were playing with toys. Troops quickly cleared out the building.

Just a few yards outside Kfar Darom, dozens of Palestinians stood on the roofs of their houses watching the evacuation.

"For the first time in the last few years, I'm standing here without any fear that Israelis will shoot at me because their battle today is against themselves," said Mohammed Bashir, a Palestinian farmer.

Prime Minister Ariel Sharon proposed his "disengagement plan" two years ago to ease Israel's security burden and help preserve Israel's Jewish character by placing Gaza's 1.3 million Palestinians outside the country's boundaries. Israel has occupied Gaza for 38 years.

The Palestinian Authority and the United States want the pullout to be the beginning of the "road map" peace process, meant to bring about an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel.

Palestinian militants are portraying the pullout as a victory for their suicide bombings and rocket attacks, and some Israelis fear they will resume their violence once the withdrawal is complete.

At the Seeds of Peace international summer camp in Otisfield, Maine, recently, which brings together teens from areas of conflict, CBS News Early Show co-anchor Harry Smith talked with alumni campers from both sides of the conflict.

"Getting out of Gaza doesn't mean that we get our freedom back," says Ruba, a 25-year-old Palestinian. "I hope it's going to be for the best of everyone but, seriously, I don't trust the Israeli government now."

Says Yossi, a former Israeli soldier, "We all have our own fears and, when we come to speak about peace, we're not talking about hugging every day and all day, but we're talking about hard situations and how we can find a solution for it."


©MMV CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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