JERUSALEM - Israel's military announced Sunday it would end a sweeping ban on entering occupied Palestinian areas in the West Bank. <br>
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Restrictions will remain, however, in three key areas: Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's besieged compound in the city of Ramallah; Bethlehem's Church of the Nativity, site of a standoff between troops and scores of militants holed up inside; and the town of Jenin, which saw the deadliest battles last week. <br>
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The army's decision came in response to a growing chorus of protest from media groups, which have called on the military to stop interfering with coverage of the army's 17-day-old offensive. <br>
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``We are, as of today, allowing the entry of journalists into the different areas controlled by the Israel Defense Forces,'' said Lt. Col. Olivier Rafowicz, a military spokesman. <br>
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But he added that entry of journalists would still require ``coordination'' with the army, and that some areas ``will remain closed because of operational reasons which cause a danger to the journalists.'' <br>
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He said that entry into the West Bank cities of Ramallah, Bethlehem, and Nablus would, in principle, be allowed. <br>
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Last Tuesday, six groups representing journalists - the local Foreign Press Association and five international bodies - issued a joint statement calling on the Israeli government to lift the ban on reporters, calling it ``excessive, unjustifiable and utterly counterproductive.'' <br>
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Journalists also had been preparing a court challenge against the policy. <br>
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Attorney Gilead Sher said he had held intensive contacts with military authorities in recent days on behalf of the local Foreign Press Association and that ``a planned petition on the matter to the Supreme Court is currently on hold'' as a result of Sunday's announcement. <br>
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Earlier Sunday, journalists were blocked by the military from entering Ramallah, Jenin and other areas, and some video equipment was seized. <br>
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Some reporters were allowed into Jenin on a pool basis, however. <br>
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There is heated controversy over how many Palestinians were killed during the assault on the city's refugee camp last week. Israel labeled Palestinian charge of a massacre ``propaganda,'' but Israel's own Supreme Court halted the army's intention to bury the bodies of those killed there, a plan Palestinians said was part of a coverup. The court was hearing petitions against the army later Sunday.
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