Title: The Wall In the West Bank
1The Wall In the West Bank
- The Separation Barrier, the Apartheid Wall, the
Fence -
2The foot of the wall
3Taking up valuable agricultural land
4One of the sniper towers
- Concrete wall
- 25 feet high
- 6 feet wide at the base
- 2 feet wide at the top.
- Armed concrete watchtowers and firing posts every
100 meters
5Electric fence
- Security zone 30 to 100 meters wide
- No trees or structures in order to make way for
- Electric fences
- Trenches
- Cameras
- Sensors
- Security patrols
- The barrier is in fact a number of different
obstacles and hurdles.
6The electric fence version
- Three layers of coiled razor wire
- trench 4 feet deep
- electrified fence with cameras along its route
- strip of fine sand to reveal footprints
- paved military road for army patrols
7The electric fence version
- another trench the other side and more coiled
razor wire - watchtowers and entry gates at various intervals
- exclusion zone on the Palestinian side of
undetermined length
8West Bank!
Time.com
9Coiled razor wire
10Qalqilya
- The city of Qalqilya is almost completely
surrounded by wall - The only access for entering and leaving the town
is a narrow strip guarded by a military
checkpoint.
11- Homes, farms, fields, greenhouses within 35
meters of wall destroyed - Wall confiscated and isolated 3,750 dunums of
land - Another 2,200 dunums destroyed for its footprint
Destroyed olive trees near Qalqilya
12The noose around Qalqilya
- Population 42,000 already 8,000 residents have
left - Sits atop the Western Aquifer Basin produces
half of West Banks water resources - Israel gains near total control to highest
productive zones of this aquifer basin
13From the village of Habla, with Alfe Menashe
settlement in background
14Restriction on movement
- Before the wall
- 250 permanent Israeli military checkpoints
roving checkpoints - barricades, roadblocks
- by-pass roads for settlers only
- permits required to go from one town to another
15Restriction on movement
- With the wall
- restriction on movement will be even more
severely hampered - there will be more checkpoints
- 500,000 Palestinians will be totally isolated in
enclaves living in closed military zones with
their status unclear. Would require permits to go
through any gates into the West Bank. - All of the Palestans will be surrounded by
Israel, to the West, North, South and East.
Palestinians will need the permission of the
Israeli military to move from one Palestan to
another. - The settlers living on illegally confiscated
Palestinian land will have total freedom of
movement.
16Freedom of movement
17Truncated Palestans and enclaves
18Impact on Palestinian land
- Phase I loss of land 2.9 in Northern area
- Phase II loss of land 25 of West Bank
containing 80 of fertile land and 65 of
Palestinian water resources - Phase III loss of land 55 of West Bank, up to
600 km of wall. - Israel will have control over 90 of historical
Palestine.
19Three phases of land confiscation
20Palestinian Land before the Wall
21Bulldozing the land
22Uprooting the olive trees
23After the bulldozers
24Gates and access to their farmland
- The Israelis made a fence around the
settlement, then they put in a small gate so we
could get to our olive trees. They gave us the
key and let us come and go for the first year.
Then they changed the lock and put a guard on.
But he doesnt come on the Sabbath and on
holidays and when he is sick. Then one day he
doesnt come at all and you cant get to your
land. Then they declare you are not working on
your land and seize it. - Ahmad Abdul-Karim, Palestinian Farmer.
-
- Quote Uzi Dayan, the first director of the
barrier project, admitted that the Palestinians
fears are not unfounded.
25Water
- Phase I approx. 36 groundwater wells
confiscated, 14 threatened with demolition in
Walls buffer zone - Wall separates water sources and networks from
agricultural lands. - A number of villages are to lose their only
source of water. These days Jayous receives
running water for only 2 hours every three days - Western Aquifer Basin, second largest freshwater
source in the region after the Jordan River,
provides almost half of the West Banks water
supply. - All the water from the Jordan River goes to
Israel - Palestinians face water shortages on a regular
basis
26Impact on people
- Phase I According to World Bank the livelihood
of 200,000 individuals will be affected, nearly
70 towns, villages, hamlets will be separated
from their means of livelihood - 20,000 individuals in the North will be
located east of the wall, their lands to the west - Phase II 400,000 Palestinians west of wall
- Phase III 500,000 individuals will be located the
Israeli side of the wall in closed military
zones - About 20 of West Bank residents will be cut off
from towns and other areas of the West Bank and
Jerusalem.
27Ras Atiya wall right next to school
28Settlement of Ets Efraim from Masha camp
29Impact on economy
- A report written by experts from the World Bank
warns that building the wall is liable to bring
economic and social catastrophe. - Freedom of movement, the key to a healthy
economy - denied to Palestinians
- Widespread unemployment, poverty and hunger
- Destruction of property
- Livelihoods destroyed
30Agricultural production
- The areas confiscated are the most fertile in the
West Bank. One square kilometer yields income of
around US900,000 per annum. - Lost production 2,200 tons of olive oil per
season, 50,000 tons of fruits and over 100,000
tons of vegetables. 20,000 grazing animals will
not have access to their grazing lands.
31Economic hardship
- Unemployment
- Gaza
- 80 to 90
- West Bank
- 50- will increase with the impact of the wall
- Azzun Atme, before September 2000 unemployment
10, now 70 - Many Palestinians live on less than 2 per day.
32One olive tree left
33Security or not?
- The wall is not being built inside or even on the
Green Line. It is being built entirely on
Palestinian land. - 500,000 Palestinians will end up in enclaves on
the Israeli side of the wall. Would they not
present a threat to Israels security? - The wall is not a military solution
strategically speaking, a wall that is to provide
security would be a straight one, one that was as
short as possible, but this wall takes all kinds
of divergences and is very long. - A wall on the Green Line would be one-third the
length reducing the risk of breakthroughs,
military deployment and initial cost (2 million
per kilometer).
34Security or not?
- What is the rationale for building an Eastern
wall? There is no threat from Jordan that
borders this part of the West Bank. No suicide
bombers have come over the Jordan River. - Missiles fly over walls
- Israelis can be attacked abroad
35COSTS
- The cost of the wall is 2 million per kilometer.
If the full 600 km route is implemented, total
cost 1.2 billion - Quote
- It would be cheaper to give each resident of
Qedumim a villa in the center of Israel than to
build this fence. Army source quoted in Yediot
36Even right-wing settlers know the fence is not
for security
- David Levy, Head of Jordan Valley Council
- It is clear to everyone that this is a political
line behind which there is a political outlook.
Such a fence is a political statement, a
statement of annexing the Jordan Valley under
cover of the security fence. - The National Council for Peace and Security, a
group of high-ranking retired officers - The path of the wall was planned for political
and not for security reasons. - (Yediot)
37Case studies
- Quote As the Israeli newspaper, Yediot
Aharanoth, points out - Behind the separation fence are thousands of
personal tragedies, which are entirely invisible
to the Israeli public.
38Daba
- Farmlands to east of wall, they are trapped west
of the wall in an enclave. - 15 other communities in this situation.
- 250 dunums confiscated for wall. In 1983, Daba
lost 125 dunums for construction of Alfe Menashe. - Settlers enjoy running water and electricity,
while the Palestinians in Daba rely upon water
shipments and generators.
39Jayous
- 6 km east of the Green Line
- 1986 Israel confiscated 1,362 dunums Zufin
settlement - 1990 Israel confiscated 30 dunums dump site for
nearby settlements - 2003 the wall separates Jayous farmers from 9,000
dunums of rich agricultural land that provided
90 of towns total economic revenue - All 7 of the towns water wells are behind the
wall. The town receives running water only 2
hours every three days, average per capita water
consumption 20 liters per day, 5 times below
WHOs minimum of 100 liters per day.
40Jayous lands
41Azzun Atme
- 3 km from Green Line, 10 km. southeast of
Qalqilya. - 1982 Israel constructed Shaare Tiqwa, between
Beit Amin and Azzun Atme, effectively splitting
the two neighbouring villages, disrupting
territorial contiguity - Village yields highest produce per dunum of land
in West Bank. - Today, main road to village completely blocked
off, preventing shipment of produce. - With wall, Azzun Atma will be surrounded by
barrier on all sides and become an enclave. - Residents will be caged into their village,
unable to travel throughout West Bank or even
visiting neighbouring villages - Education curtailed because teachers will not be
allowed to enter village. - Impact on education, health, psychological
well-being, employment, survival.
42Road between Beit Amin and Azzun Atme Settlement
of Shaare Tiqwa intruding between the two
villages
43Human Rights
- Btselem has listed the following infringements
of human rights - The right to freedom of movement
- The right to work and to an adequate standard of
living - The right to property
44Against International law
- Under international law, the wall is a form of
collective punishment. - Under Oslo II, Israel and the PA undertook that
neither side shall initiate or take any step
that will change the status of the West Bank and
the Gaza Strip pending the outcome of the
permanent status negotiations. - Such extensive destruction of private property,
without genuine military necessity, amounts to a
grave breach under article 147 of the Fourth
Geneva Convention.
45The future
- Only 10 of historical Palestine will be left for
any future state of Palestine and that would be
truncated and encircled by Israel. - The pattern of concentrating Palestinians into
ever-smaller zones of territory will continue,
and settlements will expand. - Israeli activist
- Security for Israelis will be achieved only when
security and freedom will be enjoyed by
Palestinians.