The Oslo Accords created three temporary distinct administrative divisions in the West Bank and Gaza Strip until a final status accord would be established. The areas are not contiguous within each other but rather distributed depending on the different population areas as well as Israeli military requirements.
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Area B is defined as land under Palestinian civil control and Israeli military control. Israeli settlers have, according to Dror Etkes, violated the accords by spreading into Area B, and seizing private Palestinian land for cultivation and settlement in acts of 'unbridled thievery'. Examples cited are the Amona settlement, overlooking Ofra, where land belonging to villagers of Deir Dibwan has been taken for redevelopment: the settlement of Itamar has seized control of land and resources belonging to the Area B villages of Yanun, Awarta and Einabus: Settlers have seized Area B land near Esh Kodesh and Mitzpeh Ahiya east of Shiloh: settlers of Ma'ale Rehav'am have built in a nature reserve established under the Wye River Memorandum.[2]
The Palestinian side (later to become the Palestinian National Authority) agreed to ensure free access to a specific list of Jewish religious sites located in Areas 'A' and 'B' as specified in the 1995 Interim Agreement on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip,[3] but due to the uncertain security situation, the Israel Defense Forces limits visits by Jews to rare occasions. In Area 'C', Palestinians were given the right to visit al-Maghtas on the Jordan River.
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