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lennart
21-01-03, 14:34
20.1.03: B'Tselem Calls on the Defense Minister: Call Off the Demolition of the Nazlat 'Issa Market

Tonight, B'Tselem issued an urgent letter to the Defense Minister calling on him to withdraw the order to demolish the market in Nazlat 'Issa, In the Tulkarm district of the West Bank.

B'Tselem called upon the Minister to take the necessary measures to legalize the businesses in the market, or find an alternative solution that would not harm the livelihood of the vendors and their families.

B'Tselem warned that demolishing the market would severely violate the human rights of hundreds of residents and constitute a breach of international law which binds Israel as the occupying force in the Territories.

Over the last two days, the Civil Administration notified store owners in the Nazlat 'Issa market of the imminent demolition and ordered them to clear out their merchandise. Demolishing the market will destroy the principal source of income for the residents of the village and its vicinity.






Urgent Press Release
Israeli bulldozers will destroy the entire village of Al-Daba’ in the Qalqilya district. The village consists of 250 Palestinians living in 42 houses. Sixty ton American made armored Caterpillar D-9 bulldozers will make short work of 42 houses, 600-700 dunums of agricultural land, a mosque, and an elementary school for 132 children.

The military order was issued 30 days ago and required the clearing of 50 meters of land next to the billion dollar wall (financed by the United
States) being built to separate Palestinian land from Israel in the northern part of the West Bank. The clearing operation has exceeded its orders and now the destruction will extend 500 meters into the West Bank and engulf the village of Al-Daba’.

Construction of the 8-meter high, 360-kilometer long wall has been proceeding inside the 1967 armistice line. When completed, an additional seven percent of Palestinian land will be confiscated and if the wall is extended to Hebron, ten percent of land will move to the Israeli side of the border. When completed, the wall will be fitted with motion sensors, observation towers every 300 meters, barbed wire, and a two-meter deep ditch to prevent Palestinians from entering Israel. Many observers believe that the wall is being built because Israel has failed to halt Palestinians by other means from crossing to Israel to find work to support their families. The Israeli wall has been compared to the Cold War’s Berlin Wall, separating the East and West Berlin, constructed by the East Germans to prevent escape to freedom. To the contrary, the Israeli wall creates a concentration camp of the West Bank.

The Al-Daba’ land confiscation is just the latest outrage of land stealing. Thus far, since 1967, Israel has confiscated 750,000 acres of the 1.5 million acres of Palestinian land in the West Bank and Gaza. Ariel Sharon initiated land confiscation and settlement construction in 1967 as Israel’s Minister of Housing. It is clear that Israel’s confiscation and control of large portions of the West Bank and Gaza for sites to construct settlements and its refusal consider negotiations about the land is a strategy designed to permanently annex the land and thus prevent a meaningful and fair peace settlement.

Israel’s proposed action with respect to the village of Al-Daba' will constitute a violation of the Geneva Convention of 1949. Article 4 and 94 relates to denial of children’s education, Article 17 and 49 relates to forced transfer of populations, Article 39 relates to ability to work, Article 46 relates to property confiscation, and Article 53 relates to destruction of property. All of these violations represent indictable war crimes punishable by imprisonment.

Support the people of Al-Daba’ and send messages to demand intervention to prevent its destruction.



De transfer van Palestijnen gaat met grote vaart door.

lennart
21-01-03, 14:46
Transfer by any other name
Graham Usher
Al-Ahram Weekly
9 - 15 January 2003


Hebron has become a microcosm of the latest phase of the Israel-Palestinian conflict -- a struggle between demography and geography, writes Graham Usher

During curfew Hebron becomes a city in the air. Palestinian children play on a sea of cup-shaped roofs that shore the mighty Ibrahimi mosque, resting place to the Prophet Abraham and a contested site between Arab and Jew in the West Bank city. Women sling buckets of bread from window to window. Men smoke in arched doorways.
For most of the last two months, the streets have been given over to their conquerors. On a square hosting a vast Jewish candelabra, decked with Israeli flags, two women chat in the wintry sunshine. They are among the 400 Jewish settlers in Hebron who live amid 130,000 Palestinians, guarded by 2,000 Israeli soldiers. During curfew, the settlers are free to walk the streets of Hebron's Old City. The Old City's 20,000 Palestinians are free to watch them from aerial domiciles while the ground is pulled from under their feet.
On 15 November three Palestinian guerrillas from Islamic Jihad killed nine soldiers and three Israeli security guards on a road that links the Old City to the Kiryat Arba settlement that lies on its outskirts. Speaking to army commanders the next day, Israel's Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said Israel would "take advantage of the opportunity" to "minimise the number of Palestinians living among the Jewish settlers" in Hebron.
In practical terms this meant authorisation for establishing a new territorial "corridor" joining Kiryat Arba to the Ibrahimi mosque. The new road will be 1.7 kilometres-long, off-limits to the Palestinians and fenced by two two-metre walls. The Palestinians say the corridor will entail the destruction of 20 historic buildings, some dating from the 15th century, and the expropriation of 61 parcels of Palestinian-owned land. The army says the "widened" road is needed for security and that in any case the buildings are uninhabited ruins.
The homes are certainly ancient. But they are not empty. If the destruction goes ahead, eight Palestinian families will lose their properties, rendering 110 people homeless. 76-year-old Ahmad Jaber is one of them. He lives with his 15 children and grandchildren in a three-floor apartment on the edge of the new road. His home has so far been spared a demolition order, though not an army observation post that perches on the roof.
But he will lose the neighbouring ancestral buildings. One is hewn from Hebron quarried stone with an arched gable and capped with a small dome. Until recently his brother lived there. Today it serves as a stable. In a darkened corner there is a sword relief, dating it from the Ottoman period. "It saddens me to lose this," says Jaber. "It is erasing our history. We are so close to the Ibrahimi mosque."
But he is more alarmed about what may happen in the aftermath. "What if the settlers from Kiryat Arba decide to move in next door? What will happen to us then? We will be forced to leave."
Such fears are real, says Khalid Qawasmi, head of Hebron's Rehabilitation Committee (HRC). "The corridor between Kiryat Arba and the Old City is an old plan of Sharon's. He first raised the idea in 1996. But it's only the first stage. He has also said he wants to establish a new settlement along the route of the road. If this happens, some 5,000 Palestinians could be displaced. That's the number of people currently living in neighbourhoods on either side of the corridor."
Nor would such an exodus be unusual given the recent history of Hebron. Qawasmi cites some figures.
In 1952, 10,000 Palestinians lived in the Old City. After years of neglect by the Jordanian authorities, occupation by the Israeli army and harassment by armed settlers, by 1996 the number had dwindled to 400, with most moving north to Bethlehem, Jerusalem or Hebron's new city.
With the establishment of Palestinian Authority control over 80 per cent of Hebron in 1997 the tide started to turn. In 2000, 2,500 Palestinians were again living in the Old City, drawn back into old properties restored by the HRC with funds supplied by Arab and European donors.
Since the Intifada began -- and especially since Israel's full re- occupation of Hebron last year -- the tide has washed back again. In the last 12 months the army has confiscated 14 Palestinian properties in the Old City, shut down 500 shops and 500 Palestinians have again abandoned 100 homes. If the corridor is built, that stream could become a flood, warns Qawasmi.
For many Palestinians and Israelis, Hebron is the microcosm of the current phase of the Israel-Palestinian struggle. The settlers -- most of them from the messianic Gush Emunim movement -- believe they have a God-given right to establish a Jewish city on the land of their Patriarchs. The Palestinians say Hebron has been a mainly Arab and Muslim city for a thousand years and is in any case occupied territory under international law. Israel has no claim of sovereignty there, Biblical or otherwise.
But beneath the religious and national claims Hebron represents a more existential contest, one fought between demography and geography. The Palestinians clearly have the weight of numbers on their side and believe they will see off the soldiers and settlers in the way they saw off the Crusaders, the Ottomans and the British. But the settlers, armed with a complicit government and army, believe they have the power of geography. So long as the Jewish construction and Arab destruction proceeds, they are convinced they can carve out a Jewish Hebron in the heart of the Palestinian one.
Which will prevail -- the people or the land? The answer lies in the air, says Qawasmi.
"It depends ultimately on the international community. But we have first to encourage the Palestinians not to leave their homes. We know Sharon cannot kick out 5,000 Palestinians in one go. But he can kick out 100 Palestinians today and another 100 in six months time. Then Palestinians will start to leave on their own. We have to alert the world that is the forcible transfer of a people against their will. It might be slow, incremental and 'quiet', but it is still transfer".

plexus
21-01-03, 15:10
...och die palestijnen (de daadwerkelijke bevolking, die beroofd zijn van hun waardigheid-eer-waarde-moed-trots-rijkdom-LAND-LAND-LAND-) die moeten niet zo zeuren..zien ze nou werkelijk waar niet in hoe het joodse volk in Israel dagelijks in grote onrecht leeft.

:duizelig:

lennart
21-01-03, 20:44
Het protest van B'tselem heeft niets uitgemaakt. De markt is kapot gemaakt.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/2680777.stm

klein stukje hieruit:



The village, which is on the edge of the West Bank, contains a market of 170 shops and is the main source of income for Nazlat Issa's residents.

The shops cater to Israeli Arab customers and some Israeli Jews who come from Israel because prices are low.

There were also rumours that the shops were cleared to make way for a security fence being built to protect Israel from suicide bombers, but this has been denied by officials.

The Israeli army has said more demolitions would be conducted in the area.

Israel has also demolished dozens of homes in the West Bank and Gaza because they belonged to Palestinians involved in bombing and shooting attacks on Israelis.



Het was kortom niet eens om hun apartheids hek te doen. Het is gewoon gesloopt, er is geen reden gegeven. Meer sloping zal volgen.

Malcolm_X
21-01-03, 21:24
Ik hoor nu geen Bush alias Chimpansee met een toespraak en dat hij deze terroristische daad van de Zionisten te verafschuwen...ook hoor ik zijn hondje Blair ook niet......Agh jah....heel de wereld is stil.....zijn toch maar domme barbaren die palestijnen.....


lah howlah wallah qoewatah illah billah.....

lennart
22-01-03, 17:54
http://www.btselem.org/Images/Photographs/030121_Nazlat_Issa_by_David_Nir.jpg

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/38723000/jpg/_38723255_market300.jpg