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MARIA-789794

Articles Posted: 0  Links Seeded: 426
Member Since: 12/2008  Last Seen: 5/17/2012

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Amira Hass / Palestinian farmers are being treated like criminals

Seeded on Fri Jan 22, 2010 4:07 PM EST
Read ArticleArticle Source: Haaretz
world-news, israel, palestine, west-bank, settlers
Seeded by Maria-789794
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Experience shows that if you use heavy equipment to rehabilitate the land, it immediately attracts Civil Administration inspectors and local settlers, and is followed shortly afterward by stop-work injunctions.

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Maria-789794

About 70 percent of Palestinian agricultural land is located in areas that Israel has defined as Area C, under full Israeli control. Therefore, for the non-profit organizations, reclaiming the land is part of the political, popular struggle against its annexation to Israeli settlements and outposts. But for the farmers themselves, this battle also involves many risks, which many prefer not to take.

In the wake of the flood of stop-work injunctions that arrived in 2008 , said the European official, fewer farmers were willing to join the land reclamation project in Area C. Some borrowed money in order to pay for their share of the work. Then came the injunctions. The work was stopped, but their debts remained or their savings went down the drain. In several instances, the heavy equipment leased for the work was confiscated by the Civil Administration. This equipment requires a permit, because using it is considered "construction." Their owners were left without a source of income for several months. Some digger operators were arrested for several days. The Union of Agricultural Work Committees confirmed: Some of those who were signed up for the project changed their minds.

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Fri Jan 22, 2010 4:10 PM EST
Maria-789794

Nobody wants to experience what happened four months ago to the family of Rabi'a Jaber . In October, Israel Defense Forces soldiers and the Civil Administration raided the family's dry, rocky 10-dunam plot, southeast of Hebron. An IDF bulldozer scattered the stones of the terraces, turned over the ground and destroyed the cistern.

  • 1 vote
Reply#2 - Fri Jan 22, 2010 4:11 PM EST
Maria-789794

Khader Shibak of Halhoul received his stop-work injunctions in August 2008, four days after he had begun work. Up until 10 years ago, he and his brother had land planted with grapevines and almond trees. In late 2000, a military camp was set up on the mountain peak. That, and the travel restrictions during the intifada that began late that year, prevented the family's access to both the vineyard and the orchard. In 2008 the army camp was removed, and the family decided to reclaim and rehabilitate its land - and to plant new trees.

Both the Jabers and the Shibaks - both beneficiaries of the Union of Agricultural Work Committees project - were asked to show the Israeli authorities the documents proving their ownership of the land and their right to cultivate it. That is an expensive and time-consuming process that involves fees, a lawyer, trips to the Beit El headquarters of the Civil Administration, and digging through archives, with results that often do not satisfy the Israeli authorities, with their very flexible definition of state land and private land. Both families got stuck in the middle.

  • 1 vote
Reply#3 - Fri Jan 22, 2010 4:14 PM EST
Maria-789794

European officials who are involved in the funding process are convinced that the Civil Administration has become more stringent in recent years in acting against Palestinian farmers, under pressure from the settlers in general and from the Regavim association in particular. Regavim, which calls itself "the movement for preservation of the nation's lands," is steadily expanding its work of detecting Palestinian "violations" in Area C.

  • 1 vote
Reply#4 - Fri Jan 22, 2010 4:15 PM EST
Maria-789794

Regavim calls on the Foreign Ministry to convey an unequivocal message to the international parties, and state that Israel is very upset by their behavior and demands that they immediately desist.

"The Regavim movement is pleased to hear that the Civil Administration has responded to its demands and has been enforcing the law in an egalitarian manner, among Arabs as well."

  • 1 vote
Reply#5 - Fri Jan 22, 2010 4:16 PM EST
norsam

With the heavy hand of militant extremist settlers supported by their friends in the government, the dire situation of agricultre land to be lost to the greedy israeli settlers will continue and is just more and more difficulties for people of Palestine.

Rules are just being made by the israelis to satisfy there ultimate goal of slowly taking away the land and occupying it to make more settlements for the so called immigrants from europe and us.

  • 2 votes
Reply#6 - Fri Jan 22, 2010 4:47 PM EST
Maria-789794

This is why they cannot be trusted in their "commitment to peace"

  • 1 vote
#6.1 - Sat Jan 23, 2010 9:25 AM EST
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