Captured Israeli Soldier Writes Home
Letter To Dad Authenticated, As Egypt Mediates Major Prisoner Swap
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Play CBS Video Video Eye To Eye: Tzipi Livni Only On The Web: Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni talks with Katie Couric about efforts to negotiate peace in the region, and what the future holds for Israel.
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Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, left, meets with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas at U.N. headquarters in New York, Sept. 18, 2006. (AP Photo/David Karp)
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Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert speaks during the burial ceremony of Hans and Pauline Herzl in Jerusalem, Sept. 20, 2006. (AP Photo/Gali Tibbon)
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A family photo of Gilad Shalit. (AP /APTN)
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Interactive Mideast Conflict Events, key players and a history of the world's most unstable region.
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Photo Essay Fragile Cease-Fire Tens of thousands of Lebanese return home and some Israeli troops withdraw as tenuous cease-fire takes hold.
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Photo Essay Historic Vote Palestinians vote in their first parliamentary election in a decade.
Shalit was captured by Gaza militants who carried out a cross-border raid on June 25. The militants attacked a military post in Israel, killing two soldiers and seizing Shalit. That led to an Israeli incursion into the Palestinian territories, which was followed by Hezbollah's capture of two Israeli soldiers — whose fate is still unknown — and war with the militant group in Lebanon.
Meanwhile, Haniyeh was throwing cold water on Abbas' plans to embrace the Mideast "road map" peace plan and recognize Israel.
"We do not accept the Quartet’s conditions, but we also do not accept that the present situation continues," the Palestinian prime minister told demonstrators back home demanding months of unpaid wages.
A Palestinian official earlier this week said Abbas had assured Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni that the new unity government would recognize Israeli's right to exist.
The Israeli Army said that at least eight currency exchange offices and a small bank were destroyed in the raids in Nablus, Jenin, Tulkarem and Ramallah. Troops arrested two men who had pistols and hunting rifles in their homes, the army said.
The money changers, the army said, were involved in transferring cash, most of it Iranian, to extremist groups in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, who used it to finance the production of rockets, explosive belts and booby-trapped cars, and other militant activities. The money traveled through Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Hezbollah commands in Lebanon and Syria, it said.
All told, 5 million shekels ($1.2 million) and 170,000 Jordanian dinars ($240,000) were seized, the army said.
Samir Abu Eisheh, the acting Palestinian finance minister, said that Israel was trying through the raid to restrict Palestinian economic activity.
The Israeli operation "is a continuation of the measures by the Israeli government to trap the Palestinian people economically," Abu Eisheh said. "Israel wants to continue its pressures on all sectors of the Palestinian people."
Under international sanctions, the Hamas-led Palestinian government has been unable to pay salaries to its tens of thousands of government workers since taking office in March. As a result, many Palestinian families rely on bank loans and money transfers from relatives living abroad.
Mohammed Assar, a money changer in the West Bank town of Jenin, said troops took $250,000, and destroyed his business.
"They took me from my house and forced me to open the door and took everything I have: money, checks, dollars, shekels," Assar said. "They didn't leave me anything except for the rubble."
©MMVI CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- We should all say a prayer that this young man
returns home safe to his family and maybe this would be a start to a long overdue peace process between
these Israel and Palistine. - Reply to this comment




