Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Israel expansion threatens West Bank Bedouin
Israel expansion threatens West Bank Bedouin
Feb 5, 2025 4:45 AM

  On the dusty slopes leading to the Dead Sea, the red roof tiles of Israel's illegal settlements flicker in patches of sunlight as distant mosque minarets of nearby Palestinian villages peek through the hills.

  Adjacent to this route linking Jerusalem with the Jordan Valley lie several Bedouin communities leading a simple existence.

  Eid Khamis, who goes by many names including Abu Khamis and Badawi (Arabic for nomad), is the head of Khan al-Ahmar, a community that was forced to leave the Negev Desert during the 1948 war. These Bedouin of the Jahalin clan then set up their homes in a dusty valley - now nestled between the Israeli settlements of Kfar Adumim and Ma’aleh Adumim - approximately 10km from Jerusalem.

  Khamis, 47, said the community's traditional way of life has been under threat by Israeli authorities for as long as he remembers. The encampment has no running water and is not connected to the electric grid; Israel refuses to provide Khan al-Ahmar with basic infrastructure, and prevents it from building even to sustain the natural growth of its population.

  And now, communities such as Khan al-Ahmar face a new threat, as Israeli authorities recently approved plans to build more settlement units in an area known as E1, which links Jerusalem with Ma’aleh Adumim.

  Khan al-Ahmar is part of a cluster of Bedouin communities living in or near the E1 corridor, and is deemed one of the few remaining obstacles to long-held Israeli plans to link the holy city directly with the third-largest Jewish settlement in the West Bank.

  'De facto border'

  According to Israeli authorities, the Bedouin are living and constructing illegally in "Area C" - a division of the West Bank, which accounts for more than 60 per cent of the territory. According to the Oslo Accords, Area C falls under the direct administrative and military control of Israel.

  The E1 expansion announcement came after Palestinians won an upgrade in their status at the UN General Assembly to non-member observer state. According to the Palestinian negotiating team, if the proposed settlement building goes ahead, it would effectively bisect the West Bank and sever the physical link between Palestinian territories and Jerusalem.

  In remarks to foreign journalists this week, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu said this premise was "simply false".

  "Everybody understands that these suburbs are going to remain part of Israel as a final settlement of peace," Netanyahu said. "The same applies to the narrow corridor that connects Ma’aleh Adumim to Jerusalem. This was part of all the plans."

  The Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT), when contacted for comment, deferred to the Prime Minister's Office, which, in turn, refused to give further comment, instead referring to Netanyahu's recent remarks.

  The spokesperson of the Prime Minister's Office, Mark Regev, also declined to comment on how the E1 expansion plan would impact the Bedouin of Khan al-Ahmar, saying he was not familiar with the issue.

  And Israel's Ministry of Foreign Affairs likewise pointed to comments that Netanyahu made during a recent visit to Germany.

  "The curious thing is that most governments who have looked at these proposals over the years, including the Palestinians themselves as revealed in leaked documents, understand that these blocs are going to be part of Israel in a final political settlement of peace," Netanyahu said during a meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

  Daniel Seidemann, an Israeli lawyer and expert on Jerusalem, sees displacing Bedouin communities as part of an Israeli plan to draw a de facto border. "There are three things that prepare the groundwork for this: the route of the separation barrier, which of course will include E1, ...the construction of a road grid that creates Palestinian patterns of movement that basically neutralize their presence in E1... and finally the displacement of the Bedouin there," he explained.

  Siedmann said "the three auxiliary steps" could only lead to one thing. "E1 is the fatal heart attack to the two-state solution. This is undoubtedly the settlement with the largest impact in recent memory and it will have an effect on the geography of what will allow or disallow for a contiguous Palestinian state."

  Embedded in the past

  Khamis said his fears about expansion plans were embedded in past experiences. "We are refugees and my fear is that [the Israeli authorities] will make us refugees once again," he explained. "We already know what's coming, but we don't know when. It's like a man on death row. He knows he will die but he doesn't know when his execution will happen."

  According to Khamis, all 257 families living in five communities straddling the highway linking Jerusalem with the Jordan Valley have been issued with demolition orders for their homes. "I cannot even count how many times the Israeli authorities have demolished our homes and structures," he said.

  The father of seven, who paid his way through college and received a degree in accounting, said he gets by today by working at various agriculture jobs in the Jordan Valley, earning as little as 50 Israeli Shekels ($13) a day.

  The Jahalin tribe, which make up the Khan al-Ahmar community and others scattered across the West Bank, have been particularly hard-hit, long before the E1 expansion plan was announced. With settlements expanding unabated, access to land for grazing and agriculture has been severely restricted, and Khamis says that "every time we go near [the settlements], our sheep are stolen or killed, and our children are beaten by settlers".

  The separation wall has also denied them access to Jerusalem, the closest urban center of life.

  Educating their children has been difficult; for years, students would have to cross the busy highway, and walk or hitchhike the 22km journey to Jericho to get to the nearest school.

  With the help of international non-governmental organizations, Palestinians, and Israeli human rights groups, a school for younger children was built out of discarded tires, hay and mud in the community's yard. In October, Israel's High Court of Justice ruled against the school's destruction despite demolition orders, but the community as a whole still faces forced displacement by the Israeli army.

  Headmistress Halimeh Zahayka said the school lacks heat, a sturdy roof and facilities such as computers or educational toys. "One of the classrooms is outdoors and susceptible to noise and the elements," she said. "During the cold season, only a tarp shelters the children from the rain."

  Because there is no access to the community from the highway - Israeli authorities closed the gap in the highway's roadside barrier - taxis are loathe to stop for teachers coming in and out of the school, for fear of getting ticketed by police.

  As the school bell rang and the children ran, some barefoot, towards their makeshift homes, Khamis said all Bedouin communities - living in or near the E1 corridor and elsewhere in the West Bank - were pessimistic about the future.

  "We have been living under threat long before the E1 (settlement expansion plan)," said Daoud Bseisat from al-Eizariya. "But once we are finally forced out of the area, we will no longer have access to pastures and the very nature of the nomadic life will cease to exist. It will also mean that the West Bank will be cut in half. We cannot have a Palestinian state in light of this plan."

  PHOTO CAPTION

  A young boy from Abu Nowar Bedouin community.

  Source: Aljazeera.com

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Many Egyptians fearful in Ramadan amid new ‘security measures’
  As Egyptian Muslims flock to mosques to perform taraweeh, a special nightly prayer only performed during Ramadan, many say they are avoiding prominent mosques for fear of harassment by security forces in a country dogged by political unrest since President Mohamed Morsi was ousted in a 2013 military coup.   “This...
Survivors remember Ghouta chemical massacre
  On the second anniversary of the notorious Ghouta chemical massacre in Syria, survivors recount what happened on that fateful day.   Syrian opposition-held areas in Ghouta, eastern Damascus, were attacked with chemical weapons and nerve agents on Aug. 21, 2013.   More than 1,400 civilians were killed, most of whom women and...
HRW: Use of barrel bombs increasing in Syria
  Human Rights Watch says it has evidence that Syrian regime forces have carried out hundreds of indiscriminate attacks over the past year with air-delivered munitions, including improvised weapons such as barrel bombs.   The US-based group says the attacks have had a devastating impact on civilians, killing or injuring thousands of...
Israel killed 23 Palestinians since start of 2015: PLO
  At least 23 Palestinians have been killed and another 2,156 detained by the Israeli military since January 1, 2015, the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) said in a report issued Sunday.   In its report, the PLO added that 131 Palestinian homes had been destroyed in armed operations carried out by the...
Babies die in Gaza due to the resource siege
  Sixteen-month-old Ezzedin Jad al-Kafarneh died as a result of an electrical fire at an UN school in the north of the Gaza Strip.   "On February 16, UNRWA staff discovered smoke coming from a closed room at a Collective Centre in Beit Hanoun. Preliminary reports indicate that one infant died and...
Israeli troops told to 'kill on sight' in Gaza war
  An Israeli NGO expressed concern on Monday over the Israeli army's "indiscriminate fire" policy against Palestinians after collecting testimony suggesting that soldiers were ordered to "kill on sight" during last summer's military onslaught on the Gaza Strip.   In a Sunday statement, Breaking the Silence, an Israeli NGO, said that testimonies...
Thousands commemorate victims of Srebrenica genocide
  Tens of thousands of people have travelled to Srebrenica to attend a ceremony to mark the 20th anniversary of the genocide in the town.   More than 50,000 people, including 80 foreign dignitaries, were expected to include the event on Saturday that will include the funeral of recently found victims.   The...
Israeli soldier: ‘We bombed civilians for entertainment’
  According to an article written in Days of Palestine, an Israeli soldier has given his account of the events that occurred during the attacks on Gaza in July 2014.   Known as Operation Protective Edge, the soldier described how they were ordered by their unit commander and were free to shoot,...
Displaced by Israel, Palestinians settle in caves
  Scores of Palestinians in the occupied West Bank have made homes out of mountain caves on the outskirts of Al-Khalil (Hebron) city, as Israel continues to prevent them from building homes on territories earmarked for Jewish-only settlements.   "We have tried to build homes with bricks and cement, but the Israeli...
200 Palestinian minors jailed in Israel
  The Palestinian Prisoners Society said in a statement "Most of the Palestinian minors are detained in Ofer detention center near Ramallah and Megiddo and Sharon prisons in northern Israel."   Two female minors, aged 16 and 17, are detained in Israeli Hasharon prison, the release said.   According to the NGO, arrest...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved