Israel approves evacuation compensation bill

Israel's parliament has approved payments for settlers to be evacuated from Gaza, clearing a key hurdle for Prime Minister Ariel…

Israel's parliament has approved payments for settlers to be evacuated from Gaza, clearing a key hurdle for Prime Minister Ariel Sharon 's plan to "disengage" from conflict with Palestinians.

Middle East mediators see the Gaza pullout as a springboard toward peace negotiations whose prospects have been revived by Feb. 8 ceasefire summit between Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and new Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

Sharon secured the 59-40 vote with the help of more moderate left-leaning legislators inside and outside his "unity" coalition to override a split within his right-wing party and growing protests by extremist Jewish settlers.

One more serious obstacle lurks in a pending state budget vote for which Sharon is still trying to assemble a majority to defeat Likud rebels and opposition rightist-wingers bent on toppling him and forcing early elections to scuttle the Gaza plan.

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Sharon's government would fall automatically if the budget is not passed by March 31.

Some 8,500 settlers in Gaza and only a few hundred of more than 230,000 in the West Bank are to be evacuated in several stages from July to September this year. Many of the Gaza settlers have vowed to resist and are waging a protest campaign against the plan.

The legislation provides for a total of 3.8 billion shekels, or $870 million, in compensation. Payments per family would range from $200,000 to $500,000, depending on size of assets.

Sharon's government has said it will encourage uprooted settlers to relocate to underdeveloped parts of Israel such as the Negev desert, but that it could not stop some going to the occupied West Bank if they chose.

Sharon aims to keep large settlement blocs in the West Bank for good. Palestinians consequently fear the Gaza pullout will come at the expense of a tighter Israeli grip on the West Bank, dimming their hope for a viable independent state.