Israel modified the route of its West Bank 
separation barrier on Sunday, moving forward with Interim Prime Minister Ehud 
Olmert's plan to quickly define the country's final borders as his Kadima Party 
secured a parliamentary majority. 
 
 
   A section of Israel's separation barrier is 
 seen through a security fence near the neighborhood of Issawiya, on the 
 outskirts of Jerusalem, Sunday, April 30, 2006. Israel's Cabinet voted on 
 Sunday to lay temporary fencing around areas of Jerusalem where the 
 controversial West Bank separation barrier still hasn't been built, 
 calling it a quick solution to prevent Palestinian suicide bombers from 
 entering the country. [AP] | 
The Israeli 
Cabinet voted to reroute an area near the major settlement of Ariel deep in the 
West Bank and approved putting temporary fencing around areas of Jerusalem 
abutting the West Bank. The moves will put thousands of Palestinians on the 
"Palestinian" side of the enclosure, officials said. 
Palestinians said Israel is imposing its will over disputed land and trying 
to strengthen its claim to sovereignty over Jerusalem. 
"We must make a supreme effort to complete the security barrier wherever 
possible," Olmert told the ministers. "The decisions we take today will allow us 
to complete the construction of the fence very quickly in critical areas, and 
therefore improve our ability to thwart attempted attacks." 
Israel began construction of the barrier four years ago, saying it needed to 
keep suicide bombers out of the country. Olmert says the barrier will serve as 
the basis for Israel's final border with the West Bank, which Israel won from 
Jordan in the 1967 Middle East war. 
Olmert, whose Kadima Party won March 28 elections, says he hopes to reach an 
agreed settlement with the Palestinians but will move forward unilaterally if he 
concludes there is no negotiating partner on the other side. 
His Kadima Party signed a coalition deal on Sunday with the ultra-Orthodox 
Shas Party, securing a parliamentary majority, Israeli media reported. Shas, 
however, has expressed reservations about Olmert's withdrawal plan. 
Kadima captured 29 seats in the elections and Olmert has since been 
negotiating with other parties to secure a majority in the 120-seat parliament. 
With Shas on board, the coalition now controls 67 seats. 
Israel Radio said Olmert was continuing negotiations with other parties and 
that the new government could be sworn in on Thursday. 
Shas was noncommittal toward Olmert's withdrawal plan. Shas voters tend to be 
hawkish, and the party last year opposed Israel's unilateral withdrawal from the 
Gaza Strip. 
The coalition agreement allows Shas to decide whether to support the 
evacuation plan once it becomes an item on the government's agenda, the Haaretz 
daily reported on its Web site. Olmert has previously said his coalition 
partners would have to accept his plan. 
Following last month's swearing-in of the Hamas-led Palestinian government, 
unilateral Israeli action appears increasingly likely. Hamas refuses to 
recognize Israel's right to exist and to renounce violence, leading to its 
international isolation and a deepening financial crisis. 
Hamas ran out of cash following the decision by the United States and 
European Union ¡ª both of which list Hamas as a terror organization ¡ª to halt 
hundreds of millions of dollars in direct aid to the Palestinian Authority. 
Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh said Sunday he expects his 
government to resolve its financial crisis in the "near future." Haniyeh gave no 
details. 
Hamas has turned to Arab and Muslim countries for help, raising about $70 
million in donations so far, although the money remains stuck in an Arab League 
account in Egypt. 
The Arab League on Sunday sent an emergency payment of $150,000 to the 
Hamas-led government, saying the money was desperately needed for medical care. 
Syria on Sunday began a weeklong campaign to collect money for the 
Palestinians, setting up sites to makes donations in each of Syria's 14 
provinces. 
The head of the group organizing the effort, the Popular Committee for the 
Support of the Palestinian People, Ahmed Abdul-Karim said the Syrian people 
would "stand alongside" the Palestinian people so they would not be forced to 
"kneel down due to starvation and siege." 
"Our destiny is linked to that of the Palestinians," he said. "Our battle is 
their battle, and their steadfastness is ours." 
Israeli human rights groups said the temporary fencing around Jerusalem will 
disrupt the lives of thousands of Palestinians who enter the city daily for 
jobs, services or schooling.