Palestinian Police March
Palestinian police march in front of a mural of PLO Chairman Yasir Arafat during graduation ceremonies for security police in the Gaza Strip. Some 140 police graduated from the program following three months of training.
The period 1993–99 was of historic importance for the Palestinian people. The 1993 Oslo Agreement
and the subsequent establishment of the
After the Madrid Conference
ended, official Israeli-Palestinian talks that had begun in December 1991 dragged on inconclusively in Washington
. Israel, under
The agreement was finalized on 20 August 1993 and signed in Washington on 13 September 1993 at the White House
. On the eve of the signing,
In September 1995, the PLO and the Israeli government signed the Oslo II agreement that included the following provisions: election of the council; division of the West Bank into three areas (Area A to be under PA civil and security control; Area B where the PA would share security control with the Israelis; and Area C consisting of land not transferred to the PA and remaining under Israeli control); a first phase of Israeli redeployment from land to be transferred to Area A (main towns) or Area B (surrounding villages); and Israel’s commitment to further redeployment to “specified military locations” to be implemented in three phases within eighteen months of the inauguration of the elected Council.
Violence accompanied the Oslo Process
almost from its start. In February 1994, an Israeli settler shot and killed twenty-nine worshippers in
If the Oslo accords had had any chance of leading eventually to a final Palestinian-Israeli agreement, Netanyahu’s victory destroyed it from the start. All attempts were made toward this objective: intensifying construction of settlements (for instance, at Har Homa
/
As for the final status talks, which were supposed to start not later than 5 May 1996, they were postponed time and again, and no final peace deal was concluded by 4 May 1999, as stated in the original agreements. In any case, with the PA controlling only fragmented parts of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip and Israel keeping overall control and access of people and goods to the PA territories, with settlement construction continuing unabated, and with sustained
Meanwhile, the PA had been creating its self-government institutions. Public administration departments were established, drawing from civil servants who had worked under the Israeli military government, and from PLO
Abbas, Mahmoud. Through Secret Channels: The Road to Oslo. Reading, UK: Garnet, 1995.
Brown, Nathan J. Palestinian Politics after the Oslo Accords: Resuming Arab Palestine. Los Angeles and Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003.
Enderlin, Charles. Shattered Dreams: The Failure of the Peace Process in the Middle East, 1995–2002. Translated by Susan Fairfield. New York: Other Press, 2002.
Halevi, Ilan. "Self-Government, Democracy, and Mismanagement under the Palestinian Authority.” Journal of Palestine Studies 27, no.3 (Spring 1998): 35–48.
Hroub, Khaled. Hamas: Political Thought and Practice. Washington, DC: Institute for Palestine Studies, 2000.
Lia, Brynjar. A Police Force without a State: A History of the Palestinian Security Forces in the West Bank and Gaza. Reading, UK: Ithaca Press, 2006.
The Palestinian-Israeli Peace Agreement: A Documentary Record. Washington, DC: Institute for Palestine Studies, 1993.
Parsons, Nigel Craig. From Oslo to al-Aqsa: The Politics of the Palestinian Authority. London: Routledge, 2003.
Said, Edward. The End of the Peace Process: Oslo and After. New York: Vintage Books, 2000.
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