Water Fact: August 28, 2023

The word spreads about Israel’s denial of water to Palestinians
 
This summer Israel’s Apartheid water policies reached a broad audience.  
 
On August 17, 2023 the Associated Press featured a substantial piece of photojournalism, “As Israeli Settlements thrive, Palestinian taps run dry.  The water crisis reflects a broader battle.”  It appeared on ABC News on the same day.  
 
It was then picked up by the Los Angeles Times on August 18, and Haaretz on August 19, accompanied by an audio reading.  The Middle East Monitor republished the story on August 21 and it then appeared in a variety of online publications, including the Telegraph Herald of Dubuque, Iowa.  
 
This is hardly the first time a mainstream news source has featured Israel’s practice of depriving Palestinians of water.  For instance, on July 9, 2008 Reuters ran a piece with this headline:
“West Bank taps run dry due to drought and Israeli controls.”  It reported that “parts of major West Bank cities such as Jenin, Hebron and Bethlehem have had no running water for about a month and even faucets in parts of Ramallah, the occupied West Bank’s political hub which rarely experiences cuts, have been dry for days at a time in recent weeks.” 
 
Why?  Israel had cut off their water supply and prevented Palestinians from drilling deeper wells, as their shallow ones dried up because of the drought.  
 
On July 26, 2023 Israel utilized a relatively novel weapon in its water deprivation toolbox.  The video of Israeli forces pouring cement into three Palestinian water wells near Hebron appeared on Tik TokX(formerly Twitter) and was picked up by several publications.  The video of the incident published by Middle East Eye features an interview with one of the impacted farmers as the cement is being poured.  
 
This was not the first time Israel has permanently sealed a Palestinian water source.  The previous year Israeli forces used cement to plug two water wells providing drinking water near Tulkarem.
 
But this time Haaretz journalist Gideon Levy made no effort to contain his outrage:
 
“The evil of apartheid has many faces; this clogging of wells, in which no blood was shed and no people were arrested, is one of the ugliest. No security lie or pretext can hide the concrete-covered wells, nor can the excuse of law and order, only pure evil. Even if it is not the most horrific of the crimes committed every day in the territories, it is one of the ugliest: sealing up water wells.”  
 
Where is the international outrage that will force an end to what Gideon Levy calls these “diabolical” practices?

Banner design by Paul Normandia of Red Sun Press

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In Pictures: Aljazeera on Palestinian struggle for Water

“It is easy to pick out the Israeli settlements – illegal under international law – that are encroaching on more and more of the occupied West Bank.

They stand in stark contrast to the arid villages of the occupied West Bank, where an excruciating lack of water means farmers are forced to leave their precious date palms to die and desert their greenhouses.”

Palestinians still struggle to get enough water


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"People are thirsty, crops are thirsty."

Palestinian villages and cities across the occupied West Bank are suffering from severe water shortages, while the illegal settlements that surround them are flourishing, Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported yesterday.

Describing the situation in the West Bank, Haaretz wrote: “Across the dusty villages of the occupied West Bank, where Israeli water pipes don’t reach, date palms have been left to die. Greenhouses are empty and deserted.”

Haaretz: Palestinian taps run dry as settlers fill their pools 

A Jewish settler family swims in the water of the natural spring of Ein Al-AUJA in the occupied Jordan Valley West Bank on 24 June 2020 [Amir Levy/Getty Images]

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"This is the hardest summer we've had in nine years."

“Across the West Bank, water troubles have stalked Palestinian towns and cities since interim peace accords of the 1990s gave Israel control over 80% of the West Bank’s water reserves — and most other aspects of Palestinian life.

The accords also created a limited self-rule Palestinian government that would provide water to its swelling cities by tapping the rapidly depleting reservoirs it shares with Israel and buying water from Israel’s state-run company. The arrangement left the Palestinians who live in the remaining 60% of the West Bank under full Israeli civil control stranded — disconnected from both Israeli and Palestinian water grids. This includes much of the Jordan Valley.”

As Israeli settlements thrive, Palestine taps run dry. The water crisis reflects a broader battle.

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