February 11, 2009 7:12 PM

Israeli Settlers Gone From Gaza

(CBS/AP)  The last Jewish settlers to be evacuated from Gaza boarded armored buses and left for Israel on Monday, after a farewell march behind Torah scrolls and a massive menorah.

As the historic Gaza withdrawal neared completion — and Israeli troops prepared to evacuate four settlements in the West Bank — Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said he would expand other large West Bank communities.

The settlers left Netzarim in a caravan of buses, with Israeli flags poking out of darkened, bulletproof windows, and private cars and trucks loaded with belongings. A settlement leader clutched a Torah as he sat in the front of the first bus to depart.

Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas had a five-minute phone conversation Monday evening to discuss the Israeli pullout, and each expressed their commitment to peace, said senior Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat. It was their first conversation since a June 21 meeting in Jerusalem.

The Gaza pullout represents the first time Israel is abandoning territory claimed by the Palestinians for their future state.

The settlers from Netzarim will be housed in the student dormitories of the Academic College of Judea and Samaria in Ariel. Only a third of the rooms are occupied during the school's summer semester. Professor Miriam Billig, who helped make the arrangements, told the Jerusalem Post she realized the Netzarim settlers had a strong sense of community and wanted to stay together.

There were approximately 100 religious families and 600 residents in Netzarim, a farming community and one of Gaza's first settlements — which is why its residents asked to be evacuated last. About 2,500 soldiers and police arrived Monday in the intense heat there.

The settlers there were not expected to put up a fight after reaching an agreement with the military on a quiet departure. After midday prayers, the residents were to drive out of Gaza in more than 30 armored buses and head to the Western Wall in Jerusalem, Judaism's holiest shrine.

With the evacuations of all 21 Gaza settlements is complete, reports CBS News Correspondent Robert Berger, they will be demolished before the territory is turned over to the Palestinian Authority.

Netzarim was an isolated settlement, just two miles from Gaza City and next to the Nusirat refugee camp. It has had frequent attacks by Palestinians.

More than 5,000 troops, meanwhile, headed to two militant West Bank settlements to be evacuated Tuesday. Security forces braced for confrontations, saying some 2,000 ultranationalist youths holed up there planned to resist violently. Security officials said militants had hoarded stun grenades and tear gas canisters, and planned to hurl burning tires onto rivers of cooking oil.

The substance poured on troops by pullout foes barricaded on the roof of the Kfar Darom synagogue last week has been identified as caustic soda, similar to liquid drain cleaner, police officials told the Web site of Yedioth Ahronoth, Israel's biggest newspaper.

Three youths who had come to Netzarim to resist the evacuation were arrested Sunday in possession of metal spikes, oil, barbed wire and paint, said the police commander in charge of the evacuation, Hagai Dotan.

Forces began evacuating the 21 Gaza settlements last week, more than a year after Prime Minister Ariel Sharon concluded Israel could no longer defend its 38-year-old occupation of the coastal strip, which Palestinians claim as part of a future state.

As troops prepared to wrap up the Israeli withdrawals, displaced settlers from Gaza were setting up two tent camps just outside the coastal strip Monday to protest what they said was the government's failure to provide alternate housing, Army Radio said. Sharon has called the establishment of tent camps a political ploy to create sympathy, and insists there's ample compensation and housing for evacuated settlers.


© 2009 CBS Interactive 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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