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The Golan
is a region in southwestern Syria, occupied by Israel since the Six-Day War
of June 1967. The area of the Golan is about 1250 sq km (about 483
sq mi).
Prior to 1967 the Golan was home to approximately 100,000 Syrians. When Israel invaded the region in 1967, most of the Syrian population were forced to leave. Today, their number exceeds 500,000. They are still not allowed to go back to the homes and lands they left 36 years ago.
Several thousand Syrians
remained in the Golan in 1967, however. Today, only 16,000 Syrians live in a
small number of villages. Most of the villages that existed before 1967 were
deliberately destroyed by the Israelis. Israel has also built 32 illegal
settlements in the Golan despite international condemnation. Syria tried to recapture the area in October 1973, when Syrian and Egyptian armies attacked Israel in the Yom Kippur War. Syria regained a strip of territory that included the main city of Quneitra in the disengagement agreements signed following the war. Since that time, a buffer zone between the Syrian and Israeli armies has been patrolled by UN forces. When Syrians entered liberated Quneitra, they were shocked to find that every single building in the city was destroyed by the Israelis. Ruins of the city still stand today as a witness of Israeli aggression.
In 1981 Israel annexed the
Golan by extending Israeli civil law to the region. This step was
met with Syrian, Arab and international condemnation. The Golan is the main topic in the Syrian- Israeli peace talks started in 1991. The talks were stalled for a long time because of Israel’s refusal to withdraw from the Golan. The Israeli government still refuses to implement Un resolutions 242 and 338, which call for complete withdrawal from occupied Arab territories and resolution 479 which confirms the illegality of Israel's annexation of the Golan
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