Friday, January 18, 2008

Olmert Visits Sderot Area, Promises Nothing

Hana Levi Julian

Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and officials from the defense establishment arrived for an unannounced meeting with community representatives in the western Negev Thursday. Community leaders in the Sderot area gathered late Thursday night for an unannounced meeting with PM Olmert to discuss the increasingly dangerous conditions facing residents of the western Negev.

Olmert was accompanied by Deputy Defense Minister Matan Vilnai as well as senior IDF commanders and security officials when he arrived at 10:00 p.m for the meeting, which was held in a fortified day care center at Kibbutz Gavim, near Sderot.

Residents pleaded with the prime minister to eliminate the threat of Hamas and other Palestinian Authority terrorists in Gaza facing them day and night. They also demanded the government provide them with safe rooms or fortify their homes, a basic means of defense that the government contends is not necessary.

One mother at the meeting described finding her little daughter on the ground covering her hands with her head when the Color Red rocket alert siren sounded. "It is a terrible thing for a mother to see her daughter, at so young an age, already knowing how to protect her own life, having grown up in a wartime situation," she said bitterly.

Some of those who attended the meeting said they would spend the night in the shelters. Others simply described their unprotected homes and demanded the government keep its promise to protect them, citing the critical need to be safe as the war with Gaza rages around them.

Olmert responded by telling the besieged residents the government would provide only partial funding for their defense, and made no promise to fortify the area's homes.

Government attorney Dina Zilber argued in Supreme Court on Wednesday that doing so would set a "significant precedent" which would force it to later reinforce homes in larger cities, which Zilber said would also soon be facing terrorist missiles.

"Olmert told participants at the meeting that the government does not have all the answers to the problems and acknowledged it is doing less that the citizens want, but claimed he is doing more than they might imagine. He added that the IDF is doing everything in its power to "hurt" the terrorists.

"At the bottom line, I do not want to argue [with you], and cannot argue with the hardship you face when you hear the Color Red alert siren," he told them. "I know how terrible it is to live like this, that things are not the way you want to them be. But we are counting on your courage, your strength and your fortitude."

The prime minister added that he understands the residents' feelings and that there will be "many days [they] will be angry at [him] and at the government. I cannot promise that the situation will end in a definitive way in the near future."

In a seeming contradiction, he added that "the future of the State of Israel is found in the Gaza belt area" and lauded the potential for development in the region. Earlier in the day, Sderot lost a major means of employment for its residents as the Hollandia furniture manufacturer tossed in the towel and said it was leaving the city.

Meanwhile the rockets and mortar shells continue to batter the region, with more than 40 fired at Sderot and area communities for a third day on Thursday. Several people were injured and more than a dozen were treated for psychological shock. A number of homes were also seriously damaged.

PMO spokesman David Baker told Israel National News he could only confirm that "The prime minister had visited the area Thursday night, met with residents there and discussed the situation with the rocket attacks. The prime minister pledged Israel would take immediate steps and make persistent efforts to put an end to the rocket attacks."

Kassam and mortars continued to explode in Sderot bright and early Friday morning with mourners in the city's cemetery taking cover next to gravestones during one of the attacks.

A group of some 30 people had gone to the grave of Elya Bukfish, who died defending his brother during an attack three years ago, when the Color Red rocket alert siren wailed its warning.

"We took cover next to Elya's gravestone, watching a column of black smoke spiral up from the center of town seconds after hearing the siren," said Noam Bedein, head of the Sderot Media Center who was present in the cemetery.

"It was ironic."

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