This is the first in a series of stories about the security fence's impact on Israelis and Palestinians. <snip>
The crusade the Gilboa Regional Council head helped launch three years ago, demanding a security fence between the West Bank and Israel as the only way to stop terror, has yielded unforeseen dividends.
He fired off his favorite new statistics as he drove along the security fence in the northern West Bank: "Instead of 600 terrorist incidents per year around here, in the last five months we've had zero. Tens of thousands of illegal Palestinian workers would cross through here every year; in the past five months, you've got it, zero. And guess what? Theft is way down too."
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Until recently the atmosphere there was grim.
"The city's economy is stagnant, but at least stable," he said. "People are still hurting, but at least now they don't have to worry about being blown up."
Afula suffered a half dozen terrorist attacks in the first 30 months of the violence. Ten people were killed and hundreds wounded. For a time, the central bus station downtown was reduced to a "dead zone," devoid of pedestrian traffic. The last bomber struck on May 19, 2003, at the Ammakim Mall. Weeks later the fence to the north of Jenin was completed, and Afula has not suffered an attack since.
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First in a 5-part series