This section needs expansion. You can help by
adding to it. (July 2010)
January
January 3–10 –
Shepherdstown Summit: Israel and
Syria hold peace talks in
Shepherdstown, West Virginia. Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Barak led the Israeli delegation and Foreign Minister
Farouk al-Sharaa led the Syrian delegation. The Peace Conference finally came to a dead end and was later on followed by failed negotiation attempts to renew it.
January 28 –
Yes, the sole satellite television provider (
DBS) in Israel, begins its broadcasting.
March
March 12–26 –
Pope John Paul II visits Israel, and thus becomes the second pope to visit Israel. During his stay, the Pope visits
Yad Vashem (the Israeli national
Holocaust memorial) and the
Western Wall placing a letter inside it in which he prayed for forgiveness for the actions against Jews in the past.[1]
March 14 – Israel formally deploys its
Arrow 2 anti-ballistic missile system.[2]
March 27 – An
Israeli Air Force F-16D-30F of
109 Squadron (Israel) based at
Ramat David Airbase, crashes into the
Mediterranean Sea during a training flight 17 nmi (31 km) off the coastal village of
Atlit in northern Israel. The pilot, Major Yonatan Begin, was a son of parliamentarian
Benny Begin and grandson of former Prime Minister
Menachem Begin. Neither he nor his co-pilot, Lt. Lior Harari, had notified their ground controllers of any problems.[3][4]
March 28 – A police investigation recommends that former prime minister
Benjamin Netanyahu and his wife be indicted on criminal charges of fraud, bribery, theft of state gifts and obstruction of justice.[5]
June 16 –
Israel complies with
UN Security Council Resolution 425 after 22 years of it issuance, which calls on Israel to completely withdraw from
Lebanon. Israel withdraws from all of Lebanon, except the disputed Shebba farms.
September 3 – Former leader of Israel's
Shas PartyAryeh Deri starts his three-year jail sentence after his appeal is rejected.
October
October 1–9, 2000: Solidarity demonstrations held by Arab citizens of Israel escalate into clashes with Israeli police and Israeli Jewish citizens. Twelve
Israeli Arabs and one Palestinian Arab from the
Gaza Strip are shot and killed by the Israeli police.[7] One
Israeli Jewish civilian was killed by a rock thought to have been thrown by an Arab citizen.
October 7 –
2000 Hezbollah cross-border raid: Three Israeli soldiers are abducted by Hezbollah while patrolling the Israeli administered side of the
Israeli-Lebanese border[8] and Northern Israel is shelled in an attempt to ignite the Israeli-Lebanese border too, but Israelis decide on limited response.
December
December 10 – Prime minister
Ehud Barak announces his resignation as prime minister, and states that an election for the post would be held soon.
Israeli–Palestinian conflict
July
July 11–25 – The
Camp David 2000 Summit is held which is aimed at reaching a "final status" agreement. The summit collapses after
Yasser Arafat would not accept a proposal drafted by American and Israeli negotiators.
Ehud Barak is prepared to offer the entire
Gaza Strip, part of East
Jerusalem as capital of a Palestinian Arab state, 73% of the
West Bank (excluding eastern Jerusalem) raising to 90–94% after 10–25 years, and financial reparations for Palestinian Arab refugees for peace. Arafat turns down the offer without making a counter-offer.[9]
September 28 – Israeli opposition leader
Ariel Sharon visits the
Temple Mount, protected by a several-hundred-strong Israeli police force. Riots by Palestinian Arabs erupt, leading to a full-fledged armed uprising (called the
Al-Aqsa Intifada by sympathizers and the
Oslo War by opponents).
October
October 12 –
2000 Ramallah lynching – A
Palestinian Arabmob lynches two
Israel Defense Forcesreservists, Vadim Nurzhitz and Yossi Avrahami, who had accidentally entered the
Palestinian Authority-controlled city of
Ramallah in the
West Bank. The brutality of the event, captured in a photo of one of the perpetrators proudly waving his blood-stained hands to the crowd below, sparks international outrage and further intensifies the ongoing conflict between Israel and Palestinian Arabs.
Notable Palestinian militant operations against Israeli targets
November 2 – 2 Israelis are killed and 10 are wounded when a car bomb explodes near the
Mahane Yehuda Market in
Jerusalem, one of whom is the daughter of the MK and former housing minister
Yitzhak Levy.
Islamic Jihad claims responsibility for the attack.[10]
November 20 –
Kfar Darom bombing: an Israeli school bus was struck by a roadside bomb at the Jewish settlement of
Kfar Darom killing 2 adults and injuring several others. Hamas claimed responsibility.[11]
November 22 – Hadera's main street bombing: Two Israeli women are killed and 60 civilians are wounded in a car bomb attack in
Hadera. Hamas claimed responsibility.[12]
September 30 –
Second Intifada:
Muhammad al-Durrah incident – Ten Palestinian Arabs are killed during crossfire between Israeli forces and Palestinian Arab militia at the Netzarim junction,[14] among them the twelve-year-old boy
Muhammad al-Durrah who is caught in the crossfire and is allegedly killed in the arms of his father.[15] Al-Durrah's death was filmed by a Palestinian Arab freelance cameraman and made worldwide headlines and as a result Al-Durrah became a symbol of the Palestinian Arab uprising in 2000 and of Palestinian
martyrdom.[16] Whether the Israeli forces or the Palestinian Arab militia shot the boy is a matter of dispute.[17][18]
December 17 –
Tanzim activist Samih al-Malabi, is assassinated by a mobile phone
bomb near the
Qalandiyya refugee camp.[19]
Notable deaths
February 23 –
Ofra Haza (born 1957), Israeli singer.
August 12 –
Eliahu Ben Elissar (born 1932), Polish-born Israeli diplomat and politician.
September 22 –
Yehuda Amichai (born 1924), German-born Israeli poet and an Israeli.
November 12 –
Leah Rabin (born 1928), German-born wife of former Prime minister of Israel
Yitzhak Rabin.
December 31 – Rabbi
Binyamin Ze'ev Kahane (born 1966), American-born Israeli settler leader.
Major public holidays
This section is empty. You can help by
adding to it. (July 2010)