Bi-Weekly Brief for November 15

Bi-Weekly Brief for November 15, 2021

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

COP26 told that Israel can save the planet – and is destroying Palestine

“We’ve managed to be the world’s number one country in water innovation,” Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett told the COP 26 summit on Nov. 1.  “Israel can become the climate innovation nation, and we’re ready to pave the way.”  Addressing COP26 on the same day, PA Prime Minister Mohammed Shtayyeh called Israel “the most critical long-term threat to the Palestinian environment” and pointed to its destruction of water resources and 2.5 million trees, including 800,000 olive trees, since its occupation began.  Since the leaders delivered their remarks, settlers and soldiers have destroyed olive trees and a well near Nablus and poisoned olive saplings in Battir, a UNESCO Heritage Site near Bethlehem.  On Nov. 12, the army uprooted dozens of trees in Beit Ummar (see Water Fact below).  Amira Hass has described the violent seizure by 4 settler outposts of 4,700 acres of Palestinian land in the last 5 years and documented “how the occupation harms not only the Palestinians, but the planet too.”

Demolition orders threaten to displace tens of thousands and come with a hefty price tag

It is not just trees that are being steadily destroyed, but Palestinian homes too, generally on the pretext that they have been constructed without an impossible-to-get license.  A third of East Jerusalem’s residents – 100,000 people – could be displaced at any time.  Residents, who pay property taxes, can eventually be given the choice of ‘self-demolishing’, or paying the Municipality to do it.  On Nov. 4, 10 families owning apartments in a building in the al-Tour neighborhood of East Jerusalem, who had already paid $25,000 each in fines over 9 years, received a final demolition order.  The building was too large to ‘self-demolish’ in the 2-day period given by the court, but they had a choice:  if they paid the court $75,000 within 2 days, they would have until the end of the month to destroy their homes.  If they didn’t pay within 2 days, the Municipality would carry out the demolition and the owners would be charged a fine of $645,000 (2 million shekels).  

Sheikh Jarrah: Israel’s High Court approves land confiscation; families reject ‘compromise’

On Nov. 1, the High Court approved the confiscation of 1160 acres of land in East Jerusalem’s Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood for a new hotel.  On Nov. 2, a group of Sheikh Jarrah residents rejected the High Court ‘s ‘compromise’ that would have allowed them to stay in their homes for at least 15 years while paying rent to a US-based settler organization. Seven families have been issued evacuation orders.

Locked-down Gazans are relentlessly squeezed by Israeli navy and army

The frequent attacks on Gaza’s fishermen continue, with their boats coming under fire ever closer to shore  - 2 nautical miles on Nov. 6 and Nov. 8, rather than the usual 3.  On Nov. 9, the army bulldozed crops near the border fence’s ‘no go’ area and moved onto land near Khan Yunis, ploughing it up and causing the wastewater from a sewage pond to drain onto adjacent cultivated plots.

Water Fact

On Nov. 4, the Israeli army poured cement into a fresh water spring on Palestinian-owned land near the West Bank village of Beit Ummar, 6 miles northeast of Hebron.  The ancient village, where a permanent military checkpoint is located, has long come under relentless pressure from settlers and soldiers.  Its lands have been seized for an Israeli-only by-pass road (Route 60) and the settlements ringing the town -- Karmei Zur, Migdal Oz, Kfar Etzion and Efrat –  which frequently dump their wastewater onto its remaining fields.   Back in 2010, Israeli bulldozers demolished a water well and a children’s cemetery in the village.  In July 2021, 11-year-old Mohammed al-Alami was shot and killed by soldiers as he drove in Beit Ummar with his father.  His 20-year-old uncle Amjad had been killed by the army in 2002 while standing in the doorway of his Beit Ummar home, and another 20-year-old, Shawkat Awad, was killed while serving as a pallbearer at Mohammed’s funeral. 

 

Compiled by The Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine

Banner design by Paul Normandia of Red Sun Press.

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Bi-Weekly Brief for November 1, 2021

Bi-Weekly Brief for November 1, 2021

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

Israel bent on stifling all criticism as it criminalizes leading Palestinian civil society organizations

On Oct. 22 Defense Minister Benny Gantz issued a military order labeling 6 of the most prominent Palestinian civil society groups ‘terrorist organizations.’    Addameer, Al Haq, Bisan Center for Research and Development, Defense for Children International-Palestine, Union of Agricultural Work Committees and the Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees can now have their assets seized, offices closed and staff imprisoned  for up to 25 years on the basis of secret evidence they can neither see nor challenge, and those who assist or are in contact with them can also face jail sentences. These groups have reported on Israel’s human rights abuses, denounced settlement expansion and water theft (see Water Fact below) and provided evidence to the International Criminal Court for its ongoing investigation into Israel’s war crimes.  Israel’s action has been widely condemned internationally, and inside Israel  24 human rights groups have signed onto a strongly worded front page ad in Haaretz calling the terrorism designation ‘a draconian measure that criminalizes critical human rights work.’

Israel shrugs off Biden Administration’s ‘deep concern’ at settlement expansion

On Oct. 26 Secretary of State Blinken reportedly warned Defense Minister Benny Gantz that Israel would face a ‘harsh response’ from the US if it went ahead with plans to build 3,144 new housing units in West Bank settlements.  The following day, Israel gave the construction of 2,800 units the go ahead, and opened up bids on the others.   

Who are the real terrorists?  

Settler violence has continued unabated, with physical assaults taking place on farmersIsraeli volunteers, and Red Cross workers monitoring the olive harvest during what Israeli journalist Amira Hass called  ‘orgies of attacking people and trees.’  In her column  ‘I Fund Terrorist Groups’ Hass lamented that her tax dollars support settlers and the army as they inflict unrelenting terror on Palestinians.   On Oct. 28  a new outpostwas established by settlers on Palestinian lands near Hebron, and the following day the army injured dozens of Palestinians during non-violent anti-settlement protests in Beita, Beit Dajan and Kufur Qaddoum

Gazan fishermen subjected to near daily attacks and confiscation of their boats

After declaring in early Sept. that Gazans could fish within 15 nautical miles, Israeli gunboats have continued to fire on them at 3 nautical miles.  On Oct. 27 Israel confiscated 2 boats and opened fire on a third which contained generators and flashlights that were used for lighting at 7 nautical miles.

Water Fact

Al Haq, one of the groups labeled a ‘terrorist organization’ by Israel on October 22, is the oldest human rights organization in Palestine and the entire Middle East.  Established in 1979, it has been the primary source of information about what it calls the ‘systemic attack on the Palestinian people’s right to water and sanitation’ constituting ‘water apartheid.’ From its far-ranging 2013 report ‘Water for one People Only’ to its close monitoring of Israel’s water practices and the regular submissions it has made to international bodies and the UN, Al Haq has played a critically important role in highlighting how Israel has utilized water as a tool to displace Palestinians and expand settlements.  Thanks in considerable part to its research and legal advocacy, the International Criminal Court is moving ahead with a formal investigation of Israel’s alleged war crimes.

Compiled by The Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine

 

 

 

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