On May 4, 1994,
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat
reached agreement in Cairo on the first stage of Palestinian self-rule.
The agreement was made
in accordance with the Oslo Accords, signed in Washington, D.C. on
September 13, 1993. This was the first direct, face-to-face agreement
between Israel and the Palestinians and it acknowledged Israel's right
to exist. It was also designed as a framework for future relations
between the two parties.
The Gaza-Jericho
agreement signed on this day in history addressed four main issues:
security arrangements, civil affairs, legal matters and economic
relations. It included an Israeli military withdrawal from about 60
percent of the Gaza Strip (Jewish settlements and their environs
excluded) and the West Bank town of Jericho, land captured by Israel
during the Six-Day War of 1967. The Palestinians agreed to combat terror
and prevent violence in the famous "land for peace" bargain. The
document also included an agreement to a transfer of authority from the
Israeli Civil Administration to the newly created Palestinian Authority,
its jurisdiction and legislative powers, a Palestinian police force and
relations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.
The Israeli Defense
Forces withdrew from Jericho on May 13 and from most of the Gaza Strip
on May 18-19, 1994. Palestinian Authority police and officials
immediately took control. During the first few days there was a spate
of attacks on Israeli troops and civilians in and near the Strip. Arafat
himself arrived in Gaza to a tumultuous, chaotic welcome on July 1.
As time went
on, timetables stipulated in the deal were not met, Israel's
re-deployments were slowed and new agreements were negotiated. Israeli
critics of the deal claimed "Land for Peace" was in reality "Land for
Nothing."
The momentum toward
peaceful relations between Israel and the Palestinians was seriously
jolted by the outbreak of the 2000 Palestinian uprising, known as
"Second Intifada." Further strain was put on the process after Hamas
came into power in the 2006 Palestinian elections.
Taken from: http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history
[04.05.12]
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