TEL AVIV - A group of right-wing students is planning to start an anti-disengagement hunger strike this coming Sunday, right after Independence Day. The group is comprised of mostly secular students who reside within the Green Line. The students are planning to set up a protest tent near the Prime Minister's Office in Jerusalem. The idea of a hunger strike was raised in Yesha Council discussions several months ago, but the proposal was rejected after some officials opposed it, saying it was a radical step. However, the students believe a hunger strike would sweep public opinion in favor of the settlers. 'Pullout is historic mistake' One of the students, Liron Zaidin from Tel Aviv University, told Ynet the group consists of some 10 to 30 students at this time. "During the hunger strike we'll only be drinking water and juices, without soups, and certainly no food," he said. "We understand the health repercussions. We know we're starting a complicated move and are unsure when and how it will end." The hunger strike aims to "wake up the public," Zaidin said. "For a long time now nobody has been careing about the settlers. People forget they, too, are human beings." Ariel Gilboa, who studies at Jerusalem's Hebrew University, told Ynet the students cannot go on studying when "such terrible things are happening in the country." "We want to stir public debate and convince that the plan is a historic mistake and a disaster for the state of Israel," he said.