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The West Bank was held by the Jordanian army in 1948 at the end of the First Arab-Israeli War following the creation of the state of Israel, and formally annexed in 1950. The area was integrated into the kingdom of Jordan, with Palestinians there being given Jordanian passports and citizenship. The West Bank was captured by Israel during the Six-Day War (510 June 1967) and placed under military government. There was initially little resistance from the resident Arab Palestinian population, in part due to Israeli improvements in the standard of living, and in part lack of affinity with Jordanians in Jordan's East Bank. However, Israeli settlement of the area picked up pace in the 1980s, creating tensions, and after 1987 as the Intifada (uprising) gained strength in the occupied territories, Israeli military presence increased significantly. In July 1988 Jordan renounced responsibility for the West Bank, having previously recognized the main representative of Palestinians to be the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO).
In 1993 Israel and the PLO began negotiations in the IsraelPalestine peace process. They agreed to a phased withdrawal of Israeli troops from the Gaza Strip and Arab towns and villages in the West Bank and to limited self-rule for Palestinians. The West Bank was divided into three zones: A, where PLO devolved authority was greatest; B, where the Palestine National Authority (PNA) had some limited authority but Israel maintained a security presence and overriding security responsibility; and C, under military occupation. In May 1994 the PLO assumed control over the Jericho area of the West Bank; in September 1995 Israeli armed forces withdrew from Nablus, Ramallah, Jenin, Tulkarm, Qalqilya, and Bethlehem; and in December 1995 the PLO took over civil administration in Hebron. However, numerous Jewish settlements remained in place in the West Bank under Israeli military protection. The October 1998 Wye Memorandum envisaged, after full implementation, that 17% of the West Bank would fall into Zone A, 24% into Zone B, and 59% into Zone C. The final status of the West Bank has yet to be resolved, with the issue of Jerusalem, claimed as a national capital by both peoples, remaining particularly contentious. There are around 170,000 armed Israeli settlers in the West Bank
During the second Intifada, in 200001, Israeli troops temporarily sealed off several West Bank towns, in retaliation for Palestinian bomb explosions in Israel, and there was fierce fighting in Nablus and Ramallah, involving Israeli tanks and helicopter gunships. In August 2001 Israeli troops entered Jenin in the far north, marking the first incursion into a city under full Palestinian control since the 1994 transfer of control.
The emblem recalls the flag of Turkey, a long-standing ally. The points of the star represent the eight Turkic tribes of Azerbaijan. Effective date: 5 February 1991.
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