Israel Plans Theft of 10% More West Bank Land
by Stephen Lendman
April 4, 2012
Israel
occupies Gaza, East Jerusalem, and the West Bank illegally. Its
settlements, closed military zones, tourist sites, and commercial areas
control over 40% of the West Bank, including its most valued resource
rich parts - notably water.
Its
expanding settlements steal more. When completed, its Separation Wall
will control about 12% of the West Bank. In 2004, the International
Court of Justice (ICJ) ruled it illegal.
It
said its route and associated gate and permit system violate
international law. It ordered completed sections dismantled, and "all
legislative and regulatory acts related thereto" repealed or rendered
"ineffective forthwith."
It
also mandated reparations for the "requisition and destruction of
homes, businesses, and agricultural holdings (and) to return the land,
orchards, olive groves, and other immovable property seized."
In
addition, it mandated member states reject the illegal construction and
demand Israel comply with international law. Few have. Israel defied
the ruling. Construction continues.
When
completed, it'll extend over 800km. It'll be twice the length of the
Green Line, four times as long as the Berlin Wall, and in some places
twice as high. Palestinian communities are destroyed. Many are isolated.
Thousands
of Palestinians are displaced. Weekly protests are held. Israeli
security forces confront them violently. Land theft continues daily.
Israel wants all valued areas and Jerusalem as its exclusive capital.
Palestinian
rights don't matter. Neither do international laws or ICJ rulings. Only
what it wants counts. That's how police states rule - through barrel of
a gun ruthlessness against opposition.
On March 30, Haaretz
reported new information in an article headlined, "Israel Defense
Ministry plan earmarks 10 percent of West Bank for settlement
expansion," saying:
"For
years Israel’s Civil Administration has been covertly locating and
mapping available land in the West Bank, and naming the parcels after
existing Jewish settlements, presumably with an eye toward" expanding
them.
Through
Freedom of Information Law requests, anti-settlement activist Dror
Etkes found out. In some areas, parcel boundaries coincide with
Separation Wall routes. State authorities claim national security
necessity.
False!
It's land theft, nothing else. Moreover, Civil Administration maps and
figures "suggest the barrier route was planned in accordance with the
available land in the West Bank." It's near settlements to expand them.
"Available," of course, means portions Israel wants to steal, besides all previously expropriated.
In
total, another 569 parcels were chosen. They include about 620,000
dunams, or about 10% of the entire West Bank. Stealing it along with
Separation Wall land when completed and what Israel now controls,
comprises well over 50% of the territory with more added daily. It
continues en route toward leaving Palestinians isolated in separate
bantustans on worthless scrubland.
Haaretz
said Israel's Civil Administration wants Shvut Rahel, Rehelim, Hayovel,
Migron, and other outposts legalized. Its own High Court ruled Migron
illegal. Months ago it ordered dismantling and its residents evicted. If
challenged, it suggests similar rulings against all 100 unauthorized
outposts would follow.
Of
course, all Israeli settlements are illegal, as well as 12 annexed
Jerusalem neighborhoods and East Jerusalem settler enclaves.
International law is clear and unequivocal. Fourth Geneva's Article 49
states:
"The Occupying Power shall not deport or transfer parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies."
Israel spurns it, other international laws, and its own when it comes to Palestine.
Etkes
thinks settlers knew Civil Administration plans when building outposts.
If so, it shows government complicity in what it calls "unauthorized."
Maps obtained, in fact, name communities that don't exist. They include:
- Shlomzion on Palestinian Aqraba community land:
- Lev Hashomron in Kafr Haja;
- Mevo Adumin in Azariya and Abu Dis; and
- Mitzpeh Zanoah and Mitzpeh Lahav in south Mount Hebron.
Maps
marked 81 sites on 114,000 dunams in Palestinian controlled areas A and
B. The remaining 506,000 dunams are in Israeli-controlled Area C. Over
90% of the land is east of the Separation Wall.
According
to Dror Etkes, it "means the administration flouts the peace process,
which is based on the two-state principle." Stealing all valued land
excludes the possibility. Of course, Israel always rejected Palestinian
independence and does now.
Most
earmarked Area C areas are classified state lands, despite all of them
belonging to Palestine. About 7,600 dunams are called "Jewish land" and
12,800 remain unclassified.
In
response to information now known, Israel's Civil Administration said
maps are a data bank. Occasionally they're updated, and don't reflect
settlement expansion plans. Haaretz exposed CA lies.
On March 30, a Haaretz editorial headlined, "Listen to Marwan Barghouti," saying:
"Jerusalem
would do well to listen to" his prison call to resist Israeli
repression, boycott its products, and stop negotiating with an all
take/no give state.
Before
Palestine's second Intifada began, he warned it was coming. Oppressed
people only take so much before reacting. "His words fell on deaf ears.
No one heeded his warning," and Palestine's more brutally repressed
today than then, especially besieged Gaza.
"But
anyone who thinks, like the government does, that this situation can go
on forever undisturbed, is leading into another cycle of violence."
Barghouti
always endorsed nonviolent opposition. "(W)e should listen to him
before it's too late. If a third" Intifada erupts, Israel won't "be able
to feign surprise. Barghouti warned us."
Israel Confronts Peaceful Land Day Demonstrations Violently
Friday,
March 30, was Land Day. Annually, Palestinians commemorate the March
1976 killing of six Israeli Arabs, injuring another 100, and arresting
hundreds more. They were nonviolently protesting land theft.
Earlier
this year, organizers called for peaceful rallies against "the policies
and practices of the racist Zionist state." Solidarity protests were
expected in 80 or more countries.
Palestinian
Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh said "(w)hen crowds from 80 countries
move towards Jerusalem, they send a strong message to the Israeli
occupation that no one can accept what they are doing in Jerusalem."
Israel
confronts peaceful demonstrations and gatherings violently. Friday was
no exception. Haaretz said soldiers and police attacked protesters in
Bethlehem, Ramallah, Qalandiyah, at various checkpoints, and other
locations throughout the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza.
Struck
by a tear gas canister near Bethlehem's Qubbeh checkpoint, Ali Arafe's
hospitalized in critical condition. So were others with bullet wounds
and injuries from weapons fired at close range.
Thousands gathered around Jerusalem checkpoints, as well as Gaza, Lebanon and Jordan border areas.
One
death was reported. Scores were hurt. Soldiers used tear gas, stun
grenades, rubber bullets, live fire, sound bombs, a "scream" acoustic
device, water cannons, and foul-smelling skunk water so concentrated a
tiny drop can affect a 2,000 square foot house for days. Palestinians
were also beaten.
Reporting live, Maan News
said Adham Abu Salmiya was killed in northern Gaza. Demonstrations
throughout the Strip continued all day. From border areas, Israeli
forces used live fire. Protester Ebaa Rezeq said "(p)eople are falling
here like flies. Blood everywhere."
Numerous
arrests were made. Critical injuries were reported. "Medics said the
Israeli army used live fire to prevent protesters from approaching
frontier barriers." Israel lied claiming soldiers fired warning shots.
Ebaa Rezeq said she saw them open fire on a crowd. At least six injuries
resulted.
One
Palestinian youth was severely injured when struck in the face by a
tear gas canister fired directly at him from close range. The Red
Crescent reported other serious injuries, requiring hospitalization.
A Final Comment
The Al-Zaytouna
Centre for Studies & Consultations presented its 11th report in its
"Am I Not Human" series. This one's a short book titled, "The Suffering
of the Palestinian Patient under the Israeli Occupation."
It addresses health sector abuse causing Palestinian suffering. Vast differences exist between what Jews and Arabs get.
Fatima
Itani and Atef Daghlas presented a detailed analysis of healthcare
under occupation. They included case study examples of suffering
"exacerbated by Israeli obstacles and the difficult conditions of
Palestinian health care institutions."
They
also addressed checkpoint and Separation Wall delays, as well as
obstacles pregnant Palestinian women face reaching hospitals and clinics
in time to give birth. They don’t always make it and must manage on
their own with whatever help they can get. Some die. All suffer
needlessly.
Gaza's
deteriorated sector's also highlighted. Siege causes critical shortages
of virtually everything needed to deliver care. Since mid-2007, 380
Palestinians died.
The
book graphically discusses vast differences between Jewish and
Palestinian care in terms of resources allocated, facilities available,
and treatment adequacy because of what's available to provide it.
Lawless
"experimentations performed on Palestinian patients in Israeli
hospitals" are explained. Those affected include children, the elderly
and mentally ill, and others abusively treated. "It reveals the testing
of serious drugs on Palestinian prisoners and the illegal trade of
Palestinian human organs from corpses to treat Israeli patients,
including soldiers."
"This conduct fails to respect international covenants which regulate medical experimentations on patients."
In
addition, the book covers Israel's willful prisoner neglect. They're
denied proper treatment. Sickness and disease results even after being
released. Since 1967, dozens of Palestinian prisoners died in prisons.
Many others when freed.
Israel
obstructs foreign travel for treatment, as well as the ability of
Gazans to get it in West Bank or East Jerusalem hospitals able to
provide what Gaza facilities can't. Getting permission isn't easy. It
often requires spying on friends, relatives and neighbors. In other
words, collaborating deceitfully to receive vitally needed case. Most
refuse and are denied.
Other
topics include affects from frequent Israeli attacks. They target
ambulances, medical personnel, and facilities providing care.
Using
testimonies, images and graphs, updated information explains how
Israeli abuse causes needless suffering, especially when vitally needed
healthcare's denied.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
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