World Water Day 2022 sees little progress in struggle for water justice

This year’s World Water Day (March 22) has come and gone, leaving the achievement of water as a human right – which the UN General Assembly declared it to be in 2010 – more remote than ever. 

Now we see water being used as a weapon of war in Ukraine where residents have been melting snow to quench their thirst.  As Covid-era water shut off moratoriums expire in the US, those who cannot afford spiraling water bills are again being threatened with displacement, making way for so-called ‘development’.  Large corporations continue to reap profits by turning water into a commodity that is more valuable than ever as drought conditions deepen in the western US and much of the world.  On Indigenous lands, water resources are still being plundered and polluted, with devastating consequences for traditional ways of living and the environment. 

In some previous Alliance for Water Justice forums, we have shown how the seizure and diversion of water to drive people from their land has served as a tool of colonial domination from the Americas to Palestine and beyond.   We have also highlighted how water is increasingly becoming a potent focus of resistance, and the way Indigenous water protectors have emerged as leaders in the battle against climate change.

The struggle of Palestinians to stay on the land despite Israel’s water apartheid policies was the theme of our March 19th webinar organized jointly with 1for3.org, ‘Parched in Palestine: Resisting Water Apartheid.’  A  prelude to our annual World Water Day Stand Out held this year in Cambridge’s Central Square, and to the BDS Movement’s Israeli Apartheid Week, the webinar featured brief film clips and speakers from Palestine who are building cooperative efforts to defend Palestinian land in the Jordan Valley and the UNESCO Heritage Site of Battir, and to develop food sustainability projects in Bethlehem’s Aida Refugee Camp and the Gaza Strip. 

The webinar also incorporated segments describing Israel’s water apartheid policies, which are spelled out in considerable detail by Amnesty International in its recent 270-page report, ‘Israel’s Apartheid Against Palestinians: Cruel System of Domination and Crime Against Humanity’.   The report was released in February along with a video, a curriculum on Israeli Apartheid and a toolkit.  It was largely ignored by the mainstream media, and immediately dismissed as ‘absurd’ by the US State Department and ‘appalling’ and ‘antisemitic’ by Israel. 

This major Amnesty International production was many years in the making.  It follows similar, but less detailed reports on Israeli apartheid policies by the Israeli group B’Tselem and Human Rights Watch, and earlier reports by eight Palestinian human rights groups including Al Haq, which Israel has (without evidence) designated as a ‘terrorist organization’ in the attempt to silence it along with five other prominent Palestinian civil society organizations.  Another of those ‘terrorist’-designated organizations is Addameer which earlier this year partnered with the International Human Rights Clinic of Harvard Law School in a joint submission to the UN on ‘Apartheid in the Occupied West Bank’. 

In the words of the Amnesty report, “Israel’s control of water resources and water-related infrastructure in the OPT results in striking inequalities between Palestinians and Jewish settlers. The Israeli authorities restrict Palestinians’ access to water in the West Bank through military orders, which prevent them from building any new water installation without first obtaining a permit from the Israeli army. They are unable to drill new wells, install pumps or deepen existing wells, and are denied access to the Jordan River and freshwater springs. Israel even controls the collection of rainwater in most of the West Bank, and the Israeli army often destroys rainwater-harvesting cisterns owned by Palestinian communities…. While restricting Palestinian access to water, Israel has effectively developed its own water infrastructure and network in the West Bank for the use of its own citizens in Israel and in the settlements. Israel has transferred 82% of Palestinian groundwater into Israel and for the use of Jewish settlements, while Palestinians must purchase over 50% of their water from Israel.”

Lengthy sections of the Report describe the “devastating impact” of Israel’s discriminatory water policies in the Jordan Valley and the water calamity taking place in the Gaza Strip which,  in 2021, “reached a crisis point, exacerbated by the stringent restrictions imposed for over 14 years by Israel on the entry into Gaza of material and equipment necessary for its development and repair.”

It is not just in Ukraine that water is being used as a weapon of war.   As the report points out, “during Israel’s 50-day military operation in the Gaza Strip in 2014, Israeli forces destroyed the main water and sanitation infrastructure. Israel also targeted infrastructure during the 10-21 May 2021 military operation in the Gaza Strip. According to OCHA, water, sanitation and hygiene infrastructure was severely affected, with wastewater networks, pipelines, wells, a wastewater pumping station and service vehicles damaged in 93 Israeli strikes. Compounded by the lack of power supply, three main desalination plants providing drinking water for more than 400,000 people suspended operations as did sewage treatment facilities, resulting in more than 100,000 cubic metres of untreated or partially treated wastewater being discharged into the sea every day.  Further, the limited entry of fuel and the damage to the electricity network reduced access to electricity to a daily average of four to six hours throughout Gaza, further limiting the provision of water and treatment of sewage.  An estimated 800,000 people lacked regular access to piped water.”

As the Israeli journalist Amira Hass wrote earlier this year,  seven months after the May 2021 Israeli invasion much of the equipment and material needed to repair the damage to the Gaza water infrastructure was still being barred by the 15-year-long Israeli blockade. 

At the ‘Parched in Palestine’ webinar, we asked the audience to undertake three actions that can be accessed through the homepage of this website by clicking onto ‘Take Action’. 

The first is directed at Congress and demands accountability and conditioning aid to Israel based on its human rights record.   Congress just voted an additional $1 billion in military aid to Israel, bringing its yearly total to nearly $5 billion.  Incidentally, over $170 million of that amount comes from Massachusetts taxpayers.  

The second action item urges the State Department to denounce the silencing of six of the most prominent Palestinian human rights and civil society groups that have been monitoring Israel’s apartheid policies. The third is a call for Massachusetts residents to contact the Massachusetts legislature and ask it to support the state’s Indigenous Legislative agenda.

We hope you will work with us as we demand movement towards water justice for Palestinians and people everywhere.  Let’s unite in the fight to make water a human right!

Nancy Murray
Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine

Israel’s water apartheid, funded by US aid, was featured at this year’s World Water Day Stand Out in Central Square, Cambridge.

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Bi-Weekly Brief for March 14, 2022

Bi-Weekly Brief for March 14, 2022

A digest of Israel’s ongoing dispossession of Palestinian land and livelihoods, and Palestinian resistance. 

 

Israel as mediator tries to blunt criticism from US but both Biden and Ukraine hope for more

Having angered the US by refusing to name Russia in its tepid initial criticism of the invasion of Ukraine, Israel voted in favor of the March 2 UN General Assembly resolution condemning Russia, but sent its lower level deputy UN ambassador to cast the vote.    Hours later, Prime Minister Bennett held calls with both Putin offering to mediate, and Zelensky offering humanitarian aid but not the military equipment which the Ukrainian leader had requested. Early on March 3, after international insurance companies said they would no longer cover El Al’s flights between Israel and Russia, the Israeli government stepped in to insure the airline, allowing the flights to continue.  On the same day, Zelensky, who had withdrawn Ukraine from the UN Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People shortly after taking office,  had ‘caustic words’ for Bennett and urged Israel to take a moral stand.  Two days later, Bennett, with Biden’s support, flew to Moscow to meet Putin. In subsequent days different Ukrainian officials expressed gratitudefor Israel’s mediating role, blasted it for allowing El Al to take “money soaked in blood” from Russia’s banking system, and asserted that Bennett was “using mediation as an excuse” to justify not sending military aid and not sanctioning Russia.  US Secretary of State Blinken expressed appreciation for Israel’s role in a meeting in Latvia with Israeli Foreign Minister Lapid on March 7,  just as Israel - presumably with Russia’s assent - resumed its missile strikes on Iran-backed groups in Syria, killing two people and complicating US efforts to reinstate the nuclear treaty with Iran.   With Ukraine increasingly irked by Israel’s neutral  stance, US Secretary of State Nuland on March 11 criticized Israel’s refusal to leave its ‘comfort zone’ and send Ukraine military aid.  

 

UN crisis magnifies US hypocrisy and double standards in application of international law

The cognitive dissonance has been jarring: what is amplified by the US government and media in the case of Ukraine (international law, praise of resistance including the making of Molotov cocktails, horror at targeting of high rise buildings and civilians, use of boycotts) has been either minimized or criminalized in the case of Palestine.  US Senators are meanwhile urging the State Department to “defend Israel from discriminatory treatment at the Human Rights Council and throughout the UN system.” House members on March 3 re-introduced federal legislation to fight boycotts of Israel and 35 states have already passed their own anti BDS laws.  On March 10, the Congress voted Israel an additional $1 billion to replenish the Iron Dome system on top of its annual $3.8 billion gift.

 

Who has the right to live in Israel?  

Not Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza who are married to Israeli citizens, 20 percent of whom are Palestinian.  In July 2021, a 2003 law passed as a ‘security measure’ banning their living together within Israel expired.   On March 10, it was reinstated by Israel’s coalition government and made permanent.  After turning away over 100 non Jewish refugees from Ukraine,  Israel has decided to allow 25,000 Ukrainian refugees who are not Jewish – 20,000 of whom were in the country before the Russian invasion – to stay until the war with Ukraine ends.  Meanwhile, flights carrying what is anticipated to be 100,000 Jews from Ukraine, Belarus and Russia have been arriving at Ben Gurion airport under the  ‘Law of Return.’  Among those expected to make Israel their home are Jewish Russian oligarchs close to Putin, some of whom already have citizenship.  Israeli groups have asked the US not to impose sanctions on Roman Abramovich, who has reportedly donated half a billion dollars to Israeli causes, including $102 million to a settler organization that is pushing Palestinians out of East Jerusalem.  Britain has added him to its sanctions list but so far the US has declined to do so. 

 

With all eyes on Ukraine, Israel ratchets up repression and settlers flaunt impunity

On March 5, a settler shot and seriously wounded a 13-year-old boy in Hebron and injured 3 other Palestinians, and the following week a settler fired his rifle at terrified elementary school children in Tuqu, near Bethlehem.  On March 10, settlers and soldiers destroyed water tanks and the irrigation network on Palestinian land in Birin, near Hebron, and 2 days later, settlers installed mobile homes on the site.  Meanwhile, Israeli forces have wounded hundreds of demonstrators around the West Bank, repeatedly fired on farmers in the Gaza Strip, and continued to harvest the lives of young Palestinians.  The month began when an undercover unit of soldiers sneaked into Jenin refugee camp and killed two people in an exchange of gunfire.  The next day, 19-year-old Amar Abu Afifia from al Aroub refugee camp was shot in the head near Bethlehem as he was fleeing soldiers who claimed he had thrown stones. A friend who was with him at the time said they had been hiking in the forest for relaxation when soldiers chased them and began shooting.  On March 6, in Abu Dis near East Jerusalem, 15-year-old Yamen Khanafseh was shot after allegedly throwing a Molotov cocktail, and bled to death as soldiers fired gas bombs at a Palestinian ambulance that tried to approach him.  On the same day, 19-year-old Karim Jamal al-Qawasmi was shot to death during an alleged knife attack on a police office in Jerusalem’s Old City.  Ahmad Seif, a 23-year-old injured when the army fired on a rally in support of Palestinian prisoners near Nablus, died of his wounds on March 9.  With new procedures issued by the Defense Ministry screening foreigners who hope to teach and study at Palestinian universities and restricting long-term residency permits, Palestinian minds as well as bodies are in Israel’s crosshairs.  

 

Water Fact

Israel has continued to fire on Palestinian fishing boats to keep them close to Gaza’s shore on nearly a daily basis.  The Amnesty International report Israel’s Apartheid against Palestinians states that in 1995 Israel agreed to allow boats within a 20 nautical mile zone from the Gaza coastline, but “ever since the discovery of natural oil and gas in 1999, Israel has repeatedly changed the demarcation of Gaza’s maritime space, sometimes reducing it to a mere 3 nautical miles, causing deliberate harm to a sector that is struggling to survive.” It then quotes an Israeli senior naval official: “These fields have strategic significance and could be easily a target for our neighbors... Usually to protect an area, we just make a sterile zone around it” (p. 185).  According to UNCTAD, the Palestinian economy has lost at least $2.57 billion since drilling began in 2000 in the gas fields 22 miles from Gaza’s coast (p. 190). 

 

Compiled by The Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine

 

The Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine and 1for3.org are organizing a webinar as a lead up to World Water Day.  PARCHED IN PALESTINE: RESISTING WATER APARTHEID will take place on Saturday, March 19, from 1:00 – 2:30 PM Eastern Daylight time.  It will feature speakers from Palestine and visual material highlighting Palestinian struggles to stay on the land.  Register: https://bit.ly/3M69wOo

Banner design by Paul Normandia of Red Sun Press.

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World Water Day Webinar: Saturday 3/19, 1-2:30 ET

The Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine and 1for3.org are organizing a webinar as a lead up to World Water Day.

Parched in Palestine:  Resisting Water Apartheid 

Saturday, March 19, 1:00 – 2:30 PM (Eastern Time in USA & Canada)

 The webinar will focus on Israel’s water apartheid policies and how the effort to drive Palestinians from the land is being resisted.   

Speakers include:  

Jehad Abusalim, Gaza-born Education & Policy Coordinator at American Friends Service Committee

Nidal Al-Azraq, a Palestinian refugee who is Executive Director of US-based 1for3.org

Shatha Al-Azzeh, Director of the Environment Unit at Lajee Center, Aida Refugee Camp

Mohammed Obidallah, water and environmental management expert in Battir Municipality

Lubnah Shomali, human rights defender and advocacy manager at Badil Resource Center

Also featured: short videos highlighting new forms of resistance that are taking shape.  

To Register: https://bit.ly/3M69wOo

You can watch the recording of ‘Parched in Palestine’ here

Co-sponsors:  Alliance for a Secular and Democratic South Asia, Black and Pink - MA, American Friends Service Committee – New England, Cambridge/Bethlehem People-to-People Project, City Life/Vida Urbana, Deeper than Water Coalition, Dorchester People for Peace, Eyewitness Palestine, Grassroots International, Green Roots, Jewish Voice for Peace – Boston, Human Rights Awareness: Palestine Israel, Massachusetts Peace Action,  North American Indian Center of Boston, Peace & Social Justice Committee of Friends Meeting Cambridge, Social Justice Group - UU Church in Harvard, Unitarian Universalists for Justice in the Middle East, United American Indians of New England, Watertown Citizens for Peace, Justice & the Environment.

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