Hafrada () is the policy of the government of Israel to separate the Israeli population from the Palestinian population in the occupied Palestinian territories, in both the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
Hafrada () is the policy of the government of Israel to separate the Israeli population from the Palestinian population in the occupied Palestinian territories, in both the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
Yitzhak Rabin, Israeli prime minister from 1992 to 1995, was the first to advocate for the construction of a physical barrier between Israelis and Palestinians. Following the 1995 Beit Lid suicide bombing that killed 22 Israelis, Rabin stated that separation is necessary to protect the majority of Israeli Jews from Palestinian terrorism. Ehud Barak, prime minister from 1999 to 2001, stated that "good fences make good neighbors". Since its first public introductions, the concept-turned-policy or paradigm has dominated Israeli political and cultural discourse and debate.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).