Revision as of 21:02, 19 October 2005 view sourceטרול רפאים (talk | contribs)318 edits It is *not* goverment unit← Previous edit | Revision as of 18:03, 27 October 2005 view source John K (talk | contribs)Administrators59,945 edits The Yesha Council is the local government of the settlers, not of the whole areaNext edit → | ||
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The '''Yesha Council''' is the local government of ], a Hebrew acronym for ], ], ], which are otherwise referred to as the ] and ]. | The '''Yesha Council''' is the local government of Israeli settlers in "]," a Hebrew acronym for ], ], ], which are otherwise referred to as the ] and ]. | ||
The council was founded in the 1970s as the successor to ], an organization formed to oversee the return of ] to what they see as their homeland. The ]ish population of the towns, cities, and villages that comprise Yesha stands at around 225,000. | The council was founded in the 1970s as the successor to ], an organization formed to oversee the return of ] to what they see as their homeland. The ]ish population of the towns, cities, and villages that comprise Yesha stands at around 225,000. |
Revision as of 18:03, 27 October 2005
The Yesha Council is the local government of Israeli settlers in "Yesha," a Hebrew acronym for Judea, Samaria, Gaza, which are otherwise referred to as the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
The council was founded in the 1970s as the successor to Gush Emunim, an organization formed to oversee the return of Jewish settlers to what they see as their homeland. The Jewish population of the towns, cities, and villages that comprise Yesha stands at around 225,000.
The council consists of 25 democratically elected mayors and ten community leaders. Its mandate is to provide security: for example, by arranging for the acquisition of bullet-proof ambulances and buses; to oversee improvements to the infrastructure, like roads, electricity, and water supplies; and to act as domestic and international emissaries on behalf of residents.
In addition to municipal and security cares the Council serves a political representive of the settlers and a lobby for their cause. It lobbies their interest in the Knesset and the government and is in charge of public relations campaigns and grass root protests when needed.
In 2005 it lead the settlers campaign against the Disengagement plan with peaceful mass protests (such as: human chain of 130,000 , Kfar Maimon march of 50,000 , Kotel rally 70,000 and Tel Aviv rally 200,000). The council was hailed by many centrists for refraining the use of violence, but was criticized from right winger for failing to prevent the disengagement.
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