Israeli Human Rights Activists Move to Help
Palestinians Regain Land Usurped by Illegal Israeli Settlers
Date: 10 / 06 / 2008 Time: 18:26
JERUSALEM, 10 June 2008 (IRIN) -
A group of Israeli human rights activists has begun a project to help
Palestinians in the West Bank, who have in the past had land taken away
by illegal Israeli settlers, regain what they say are their property
rights.
Israel's settlements (which are all illegal under international law) in
the West Bank, according to a 2007 report entitled The Humanitarian
Impact of Israeli Infrastructure in the West Bank by the UN Office for
the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), are causing hardship to
the local Palestinians: Their ability to develop urban areas is severely
hampered, their agricultural land has shrunk and their movement has been
restricted.
Said Shahada, from the village of Ein Yabroud, recalled how settlers
took over an old Jordanian army base, and then gradually occupied
Palestinian land and built Ofra, one of the first and largest
settlements in the West Bank.
"After 1973 [war between Israel and the Arabs] the settlers slowly began
to take the land, little by little," he said in a phone conversation
with IRIN. "Now, all that separates us from the settlement is a road."
Besides loosing land they had used for agriculture - and could have
developed for industrial zones and other projects - their freedom of
movement has been severely hampered.
"We have been prohibited from going on the road between us [and the
settlement] since about 2003," Shahada said. "There is a manned
checkpoint there with soldiers on guard." To reach Ramallah, the nearest
town, Shahada has to take a circuitous route.
New project
The first move in the new project was a petition sent to the Israeli
High Court on 4 June - by two non-governmental organisations (NGOs)
B'Tselem and Yesh Din, and five Palestinian landowners, including
Shahada - against plans to complete nine new permanent structures in the
settlement of Ofra near Ramallah.
The court was given documents allegedly proving Palestinian ownership of
most of the settlement, including the area where construction is taking
place.
"The petitioners' ownership of the land is unquestioned," said Michael
Sfard, a lawyer for the groups. He hopes the court will issue an order
preventing the buildings from being inhabited.
"If the settlers manage to inhabit the homes, based on past experience,
it will be very difficult to remove them," said Avi Berg from B'tselem.
"Each day that passes makes this more urgent."
Violence has generally erupted between settlers and the Israeli police
and military in the few instances in which the latter tried to evacuate
inhabited homes.
"I can see them building on our land from the village," Fouad Msalah,
one of the petitioners, said, adding that he had filed the petition to
stop construction work and eventually regain his land in the future.
Berg believed that a process had begun which would help the
Palestinians, and change Israeli public opinion regarding the
settlements, by showing that many of them were built on stolen private
land.
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