Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has pledged to move ahead with building a Jewish settlement in a strategic area of the West Bank, speaking just hours after Israeli troops dragged anti-settlement protesters from the site marked for construction.
Our correspondent also said the activists who were detained were driven to Qalandiya checkpoint and then released.
"We also heard from medical sources that four people were admitted to hospital in Ramallah with injuries, but none serious."
"The media has no more access to the site, so we are not sure if the Israeli police are in the process of dismantling the tents."
Netanyahu's office ordered the move after asking the Supreme Court to lift a stay of evacuation.
Palestinian activists erected tents on Friday, saying they wanted to "establish facts on the ground" to stop Israeli construction in the West Bank.
Borrowed tactic
The activists were borrowing a phrase and a tactic, usually associated with Jewish settlers, who believe establishing communities means the territory will remain Israeli.
Activists said they wanted to establish a village on the protest site.
Netanyahu's office said on Saturday night that the state was petitioning the Supreme Court to rescind an earlier injunction blocking the evacuation. In the meantime, he ordered the area declared a closed military zone and shut off access.
The Supreme Court ruled on Friday that the Palestinian outpost could remain for six days while the issue of its removal was being discussed.
Israel announced it was moving forward with the E1 settlement after the UN recognized a de facto state of Palestine in the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem in November.
Palestinians say E1 would be a major blow to their statehood aspirations as it blocks East Jerusalem from its West Bank hinterland. Palestinians are demanding these areas, along with Gaza, for their future state.
The construction plans drew unusually sharp criticism from some of Israel's staunchest allies including the US who strongly oppose the E1 project.
PHOTO CAPTION
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu waves as he stands next to former foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman at the Likud party headquarters in Tel Aviv January 23, 2013.
Aljazeera