January 23 Water Fact

Water Fact:  January 23, 2023

Eco apartheid and ongoing colonization are paving the way to climate disaster

 

While Israel continues to destroy Palestinian homes, water sources and olive trees and its new government prepares to accelerate the takeover of most of the West Bank, Time warns that “Israel and the Palestinian territories are among the most climate vulnerable places on the planet.”

 

Drawing on an Haaretz investigation,  Time reports that a predicted rise in sea level of up to a meter by 2050 will wipe out many of Israel’s beaches, and damage its cliffs, sewage and drainage systems, desalination plants and power stations. 

 

The tiny Gaza Strip, within which 2.1 million people are currently caged, will substantially shrink in size and the intrusion of yet more saltwater will irreversibly damage its sole aquifer.  As temperatures and the sea both rise, Palestinians are likely to suffer ever more greatly from the impact of ‘eco-apartheid.’

 

A handful of Israeli environmentalists who joined with a few Palestinians to form the group One Climate(short for ‘One Climate From the Jordan River to the Sea’) recognize that “the only way to fight climate breakdown is to tie it with the struggle against the occupation.” 

 

One of its founders, Mor Gilboa, has pointed out that the current ecological crisis facing Israel and Palestine is rooted in the early days of Zionism’s project to colonize the land, with resulting “racist and discriminatory policies of occupation” leaving “millions of cubic feet of sewage in our streams and seas. They create severe water shortages for drinking and agriculture for millions of Palestinians. They promote land grabs and theft of natural resources, as well as air and water pollution.”

 

The group EcoPeace, which was favored in 2022 with a $3.3 million USAID grant, attempts to forge a working coalition of Israeli, Palestinian and Jordanian environmentalists as a step towards ‘peace.’  But its plan to create ‘A Green Blue Deal for the Middle East’ has gained little traction that Palestinians can benefit from, and is unlikely to move forward under a Netanyahu government bent on colonizing the rest of Palestine.

 

A more modest effort to address the dire water shortage faced by Palestinian farmers in the 62 percent of the West Bank known as ‘Area C’ is the current ‘Smart Water Practices’ program initiated by the International Committee of the Red Cross.    The idea is to provide self-watering ‘wicking beds’ to 30 families so they can grow healthy food.  It is unclear whether the new Netanyahu government will tolerate even a few dozen raised beds that help farmers survive in what its supporters of the Far Right insist is “Israeli sovereign territory.”  

With land theft at the top of the Israel’s agenda, climate catastrophe appears inevitable.

 

The Map of Palestine from the National Geographic Magazine, 1947. via Asia-Pacific Community for Palestine

Share

‘The Water is Surrounding Us’: Gaza Grieves as Israel Opens Floodgates

Without warning, on Saturday, December 24, Israeli Authorities opened the floodgates below Deir al-Balah, inundating the Al-Selqa Valley’s agricultural lands and flooding dozens of homes. 

‘The Water is Surrounding Us’: Gaza Grieves as Israel Opens Floodgates


Israel flooded dozens of homes and hundreds of dunums of agricultural lands in Gaza. (Photo: Mahmoud Ajjour, The Palestine Chronicle)

Share

January 9th Water Fact

Water Fact: January 9, 2023

Polluting water supplies is a many-decades-old weapon of ethnic cleansing

The new Israeli government has been described in the mainstream press as ‘far right’ and ‘extremist,’ leading readers to assume that Israel is leaving its Zionist roots behind and heading in a new and dangerous direction. 

But to the Israeli historian Ilan Pappé who has delved deeply into the historical archives for his pathbreaking 2006 book The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine, the new government represents the “maturation of the Zionist project: a ruthless settler colonial project, built on apartheid, ethnic cleansing, occupation, colonization and genocidal policies.” 

Just how ruthless that project has been is laid bare in a myth-shattering new book by Thomas Suárez, Palestine Hijacked: How Zionism forged an Apartheid State from River to Sea (Olive Branch Press/Interlink, 2023).  Using largely original source material, Suárez details the astonishing number of lethal terrorist attacks implemented by Zionist gangs to create and consolidate the State of Israel, and describes how assassination, intimidation and propaganda operated to silence critics and win international support for the ‘Jewish State’. 

Bombs and bullets were the weapons of choice, but according to Naeim Giladi, an Iraqi Jew who had served in the Zionist Underground, and Uri Mileshtin, an official historian for the Israeli Defense Force, bacteriological warfare also had its place.  In a 1998 article in the Americans for Middle East Understanding publication The Link, Giladi used information from Mileshtin to back his assertion that “the Israelis put typhus and dysentery bacteria into water wells” to make sure ethnically cleansed Palestinians could not “return to make a fresh life for themselves in these villages.”  He described the Haganah putting bacteria into the spring that fed the city of Acre (Akko) and a Haganah division dressed as Arabs going to Gaza where “Egyptians caught them putting two cans of bacteria, typhus and dysentery into the water supply in wanton disregard of the civilian population.”

 

The deliberate contamination of water sources to drive Palestinians off their land did not end with the consolidation of the Israeli state.  For 21st century examples see here  and  here and here

Share