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Guardian Unlimited -
6 hours and 56 minutes ago
pA European court has ruled that the police are breaching the human rights of innocent people by
storing their DNA on a database. Legal affairs correspondent strongAfua Hirsch/strong explains why
judges in Strasbourg reached the decision. Home affairs editor, strongAlan Travis/strong, looks at
the options for the home secretary, Jacqui Smith./ppEconomics editor, strongLarry Elliott/strong,
explains why the Bank of England cut the base rate of interest yesterday to 2% - its lowest level
since 1951 - and what it means for savers and borrowers./ppKaren Matthews was convicted yesterday
of the kidnap of her nine-year-old daughter, Shannon. She led the police and the public to believe
that her daughter was missing, resulting in a three-week search. strongDetective Superintendent
Andy Brennan/strong, who led the investigation, tells strongMartin Wainwright/strong how he felt
when Shannon was found alive./ppstrongRory McCarthy/strong reports from Hebron, in the West Bank,
where a group of hardline Jewish settlers were evicted yesterday by Israeli riot
police./ppstrongChris McGreal/strong reports from Harare on the cholera epidemic that has led the
Zimbabwe government to declare a state of emergency./p pa
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Guardian Unlimited -
14 hours and 7 minutes ago
divimg alt=""
src="http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/6401?ns=guardianpageName=World+news%3A+Israeli+riot+police+evict+settlers+in+Hebronch=World+newsc3=The+Guardianc4=Israel+and+the+Palestinian+territories+%28News%29%2CMiddle+East+%28News%29%2CWorld+newsc5=Not+commercially+usefulc6=Rory+McCarthyc7=2008_12_05c8=1129174c9=articlec10=GUc11=World+newsc12=Israel+and+the+Palestinian+territoriesc13=c14=h2=GU%2FWorld+news%2FIsrael+and+the+Palestinian+territories"
width="1" height="1" //divpRiot police forcibly evacuated a house filled with dozens of Jewish
settlers in the West Bank city of Hebron yesterday in the most public showdown between the
government and the increasingly violent settler movement for more than two years./ppHundreds of
police mounted a surprise raid on the three-storey house, which had become the latest symbol of
defiance for Israeli settlers. Troops fired teargas into the crowds and dragged settlers from the
house one by one. Around 30 people were injured, including one policeman who had acid thrown in his
eyes./ppAlthough the house was emptied within an hour, the operation triggered broad settler
protests across the occupied West Bank and in Jerusalem that continued into the night. In Hebron,
masked settlers set Palestinian trees ablaze and attacked buildings. The Israeli military declared
the southern West Bank a closed military zone, setting up roadblocks to prevent more settlers
descending on the city./ppThe building, dubbed the House of Peace by the settlers and the House of
Contention by the Israeli press, was home to 15 settler families, but their numbers had swelled as
supporters poured in. Earlier this week there were riots between the settlers and Palestinians
which left several people hurt on both sides. Settlers daubed a black Star of David on several
graves in a nearby Palestinian cemetery as well as the word "revenge" on a Palestinian house.
/ppYesterday morning the house was full mostly of young people, sitting on the cold concrete
floors, praying in the hallways or playing football in the road outside. One poster read: "This
land is our land."/ppThe settlers claim they bought the house nearly two years ago from a
Palestinian for just short of $1m (pound;670,000) and said they had documents and videotape as
proof. However, the Palestinian has since denied selling the building to the settlers. Last month,
the Israeli supreme court said the house should be evacuated until the ownership dispute was
settled./ppJust minutes before the raid, Nadia Matar, a prominent settler figure who had spent the
past week living in the house, defended the project. "They were able to do what we have been doing
since the beginning of Jewish history: to live in the land of Israel, to purchase land like Abraham
did," she said. /ppThe house sits just outside the large Jewish settlement of Kiryat Arba and,
Matar said, was a strategic asset that linked the settlement to the centre of Hebron, the burial
place of the patriarch Abraham./ppLike most in the house, she believes Israel has a biblical right
to take all the land between the Mediterranean sea and the River Jordan. All Jewish settlements in
the occupied territories are illegal under international law./ppMatar was one of the last to be
dragged from the building and as she crouched in the dirt after being deposited by the four
policemen who carried her out, she said: "Shame on the government for using all this force against
us."/ppRuth Hizmi was one of the first to rent an apartment in the house and she lived there with
four of her children. Her flat had bare concrete walls and floor, with electricity cables
stretching across the ceiling and sheets of cloth dividing the bedrooms. /pp"We are citizens who
are holding on to our country, the only country we have and they are giving it away. They are
throwing Jews out of their homes," she said, just hours before the raid. /ppWhen the police arrived
Hizmi was out collecting children from school but quickly returned, forced her way through rows of
police and briefly back into the house before she too was carried out. /ppPolice will now occupy
the building and prevent the settlers returning./ppFor the settlers, holding on to the house was
also an act of defiance against the Yesha council, the traditional settler leadership, which has
lost support among a younger, more hardline generation, particularly after Israel removed its
settlers from Gaza three years ago. /ppHowever, there has been growing antipathy to the settlers
within Israel itself. Yesterday, the left-leaning Ha'aretz newspaper described their actions in
Hebron this week as "Jewish terrorism"./ph2Clashes/h2pstrongHebron/strong is the second largest and
most contentious city in the occupied strongWest Bank/strong. It is home to about strong600 Jewish
settlers /strongand strong170,000 Palestinians/strong. The settlers arrived just after the
strong1967 war /strongand are protected by the Israeli military. They insist on a biblical right to
live in the city - the burial place of the strongpatriarch Abraham/strong. As a result,
strongPalestinians/strong are kept out of the city centre and their strongshops/strong
strongclosed/strong, leaving the old commercial heart deserted. The city frequently witnesses
strongviolent clashes./strong/pdiv style="float: left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom:
10px;"ullia href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/israelandthepalestinians"Israel and the
Palestinian territories/a/lilia href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/middleeast"Middle
East/a/li/ul/diva href="http://www.guardian.co.uk"guardian.co.uk/a copy; Guardian News Media
Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our a
href="http://users.guardian.co.uk/help/article/0,,933909,00.html"Terms Conditions/a | a
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Guardian Unlimited -
23 hours and 37 minutes ago
divimg alt=""
src="http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/60409?ns=guardianpageName=World+news%3A+Israeli+forces+evict+settlers+from+disputed+Hebron+homech=World+newsc3=guardian.co.ukc4=Israel+and+the+Palestinian+territories+%28News%29%2CWorld+newsc5=Not+commercially+usefulc6=Rory+McCarthy%2CPeter+Walkerc7=2008_12_04c8=1128924c9=articlec10=GUc11=World+newsc12=Israel+and+the+Palestinian+territoriesc13=c14=h2=GU%2FWorld+news%2FIsrael+and+the+Palestinian+territories"
width="1" height="1" //divpIsraeli riot police today dragged hundreds of militant Jewish settlers
from a disputed house in the city of Hebron, in the first major such eviction on the West Bank for
more than two years./ppSecurity forces used teargas as they surrounded the three-storey property
set on a hillside in a Palestinian district of Hebron. The settlers responded by throwing rocks and
eggs./ppIt took the police about an hour to carry the more than 200 settlers from the house, each
dragged away by teams of four officers. Around 20 people were injured, ambulance staff said,
although most were not seriously hurt./ppThe house, located near the Jewish settler community of
Kiryat Arba, has become an important symbol for settler groups since around a dozen families
occupied it in March 2007. Such groups believe all occupied Palestinian territories should be
subsumed into a greater Israel./ppThe families said they bought it legally from the Palestinian
owner, who denied the claim. Israel's supreme court ordered last month that the house should be
cleared./ppSince then, many other settlers have come to live in the home, covered with posters in
Hebrew displaying slogans including "This land is our land" and "Human rights for Jews in
Hebron"./ppThe mayor of Kiryat Arba, Malichi Levinger, warned that the families would attempt to
return. "I think we come back to this house. That is our goal for now," he said./ppNadia Matar, one
of the leaders of those inside the house, who was among the last dragged out, said: "Shame on the
government for using this force against us."/ppToday's action was the first major West Bank
evacuation since Israeli security forces cleared parts of the Amona settlement in February 2006.
Dozens of people were injured when riot police battled settlers./pdiv style="float: left;
margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;"ullia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/israelandthepalestinians"Israel and the Palestinian
territories/a/li/ul/diva href="http://www.guardian.co.uk"guardian.co.uk/a copy; Guardian News Media
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