January
On January 15, Israel and the Palestinian
Authority reached an agreement for an Israeli
redeployment from the West Bank city of Hebron.
February
On February , Israel government release of the
women prisoners.
On February 26, Israeli government announced that
they had approved plans for a new Jewish
settlement in East Jerusalem, a predominantly Arab
area.
March
On March 3, Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat had a
meetings with U.S. President Bill Clinton and
other U.S. officials .
On March 4, Israel ordered four Palestinian
organizations to close their offices in East
Jerusalem.
On March 7, the Israeli cabinet approved a plan to
increase the West Bank lands under Palestinian
authority control by 9 percent. The offer has been
rejected by the Palestinian authority .
On March 13, a Jordanian soldier opened fire on a
group of Israeli schoolchildren near the
Israeli-Jordanian border, killing seven.
On March 15, Arafat called for an emergency
conference in the Gaza Strip. Several European
countries and the United States attended the
conference. Arafat called the conference to
pressure on Israel to abandon the Har Homa project.
On March 18, Israeli workers began construction at
the Har Homa site.
On March 21, a bomb exploded in a sidewalk cafe in
Tel Aviv , killing the bomber and three other
people. Dozens more were wounded.
On March 7 and 21, the United States vetoed a
United Nations (UN) Security Council resolution
that described the new settlement as "illegal."
The United States routinely vetoes Security
Council resolutions it perceives as biased against
Israel.
On March 27, when U.S. mediator Dennis Ross
returned to the region for meetings with Arafat
and Netanyahu.
On March 30, in a show of solidarity with Arafat,
members of the 22-nation Arab League voted on
March 30 to recommend that its members suspend
ties with Israel.
June
On June 3, members of Israel's Labor Party
selected former army chief of staff Ehud Barak,
55, as the new party leader .
July
On July 30,Two martyr bombers exploded themselves
in a crowded market in Jerusalem, killing
themselves and at least 13 others, and wounding
more than 150 people. Hamas, took responsibility
for the bombings.
August
On August 21, retaliating for Israel's choke hold
on the West Bank and Gaza Strip, the Palestinian
Authority began enforcing a partial boycott of
Israeli goods.
September
On September 4, Three martyr bombers evidently
acting in concert set off bombs on a popular
shopping promenade in Jerusalem on Thursday,
killing four passers-by and themselves.
On September 9, United States Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright arrived in Israel the first
stop on a weeklong Middle East tour aimed at
generating new momentum for the stalled
Israeli-Palestinian peace process.
On September 19, Israeli troops fired rubber
bullets at stone-throwing Arabs until Palestinian
police intervened to stop the protests in the West
Bank town of Hebron on Friday. No one was hurt in
the demonstration by about 50 Palestinians against
an Israeli government deal letting Jewish seminary
students stay in Arab East Jerusalem buildings in
place of the Jewish families who occupied them.
October
On October 1, Sheik Ahmed Yassin the 61-year-old
founder of the militant Islamic group Hamas was
released from Israeli prison , as part of a
prisoner swap touched off by a failed Israeli
assassination attempt in Amman, the capital of
Jordan.
On October 8, The long-frozen peace process thawed
somewhat as Netanyahu and Palestinian National
Authority 'PNA' President Yasser Arafat met for
the first time since February 1997.
December
On December 11, Palestinian census takers stand in
the rain, knocking on people's doors in
traditionally-Arab east Jerusalem. But many
residents literally hide behind their closed
doors, fearing a census which anywhere else would
be an exercise in basic civics. Even answering
questions as simple as "Do you have central
heating?" can be risky. East Jerusalem's
Palestinians do not allow themselves to be
photographed, for fear that Israeli authorities
will revoke their residency cards and evict them
from the city where their families have lived
for centuries. The first-ever Palestinian census
turned into a tug-of-war over Jerusalem when
Israel's government pushed a bill through
Parliament blocking Yasser Arafat's census-takers
from operating in the disputed city.
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