-Caveat Lector-

From
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Print/0,3858,4241075,00.html

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Comment
Israel beset by siege mentality
Suicide bomb attacks have affected all aspects of daily life, from running a
shop to putting on a rock concert, writes Suzanne Goldenberg in Jerusalem
Special report: Israel and the Middle East
Suzanne Goldenberg
Friday August 17, 2001
The Guardian
First it was the Red Hot Chili Peppers, next British Airways. The sense of
isolation among Israelis deepened this week as airline crews and pop stars
made it clear they do not feel safe in the Holy Land.
Many Israelis share their fears - especially this weekend. The security forces
have warned that another suicide bomber is on the loose, and will try to
strike at Jerusalem, or in northern Israel within the next day or two.
Meanwhile, the Israeli army announced this week that the violence between
Israel and the Palestinians could go on for another five years. Many Israelis
just feel safer staying at home.
After last week's bombing of a pizza restaurant in Jewish west Jerusalem
killed 15 Israelis, Tel Aviv taxi drivers are reluctant to take fares to the city.
Some Jerusalemites complain their own relatives will not come to
visit them from other Israeli towns.
In the Jewish western part of the city, restaurants, cafes - even small family-owned 
chemist shops - have taken on private security guards to scrutinise customers for 
suspicious looking parcels and body packs.
Some cafe owners park their own cars in front of their establishments to block the 
space off from car bombers. Choosing a table has become much more complicated. In case 
of attack, is it safer to sit by the window - which
 is large and plate glass - or at an inside table?
Takings at shops in the centre of Jerusalem dropped by nearly 70% after the suicide 
attack. Jewellers and other shops depending on tourist traffic saw their trade drop by 
92%, according to the Jerusalem Merchants' Associa
tion.
Meanwhile, Jewish youth groups visiting the city from Britain had to make do with a 
simulated visit to the city's pedestrian mall. Instead of roaming around the shops on 
their own for T-shirts and other souvenir tat, the
shopkeepers came to the teenagers, who were safely installed in a hall on the edge of 
the city. Back home, their parents received daily email reports on their activities.
Such responses to suicide bomb attacks are seen as internal, family matters. But, for 
Israelis, who are acutely sensitive to their international image, it is another thing 
entirely when the rest of the world begins voting
 with its feet.
According to Israeli press reports this week, the appearance of the Red Hot Chili 
Peppers was seen to be of such symbolic importance that the former US president Bill 
Clinton was enlisted to plead with the group to conque
r their fears about suicide bombers, and keep the concert date.
However, on Monday, the group's manager called the concert off for good; the Israeli 
promoters said the appearance was "postponed until a later date".
A day later, there was another blow when British Airways announced that its flight 
crews - like those of other European airlines - would no longer sleep in Tel Aviv, but 
overnight in Athens.
Swiss Air and KLM took similar decisions last June, after a suicide bomber killed more 
than 20 Israelis at a Tel Aviv disco, across the road from the high-rise hotels where 
many airline crews stay. Air Canada sent its fli
ght crews to a suburb north of the city.
Israeli travel agents complained BA was surrendering to panic, and that the stayaway 
would further hurt a tourist industry damaged by 11 months of violence.
The country's own national carrier, El Al, lost $83m (£57m) in the first six months of 
this year, as traffic dropped by 21% from last year. Many hotels have closed off 
floors, or shut down entirely.
The only people profiting from the sense of dread are the private security firms - who 
say they have a "crazy amount of work".
"Even people who are having private parties call us up to get security services, and 
this is something new," Avi Bareket, the director of one private security firm told 
the Israeli newspaper Ma'ariv. "Every youth recently
 released from the army can find security work."
That is one piece of welcome news. The Labour ministry reported this week that the 
unemployment rate in July was the highest in Israel's history, with 186,400 people out 
of work.
Related articles
17.08.2001: Why Jenin's gentleman jailer lit the fuse
17.08.2001: No ban on British arms to Israel
Interactive guide
Where are the flashpoints of violence?
Useful links
Israel Defence Forces
Government of Israel
Ha'aretz
Palestinian National Authority
Palestinian ministry of information
Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2001


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