UN says number of Israeli
checkpoints in the West Bank on the rise
Date: 29 / 05 / 2008 Time: 11:55
Jerusalem - IRIN Report -
There has been an increase in the number of
Israeli-imposed restrictions on Palestinian movement in the West Bank
over the past eight months, according to a UN report.
An additional 41 checkpoints and other physical limitations on movement
in the territory have been registered since September 2007, an increase
to 607 such obstacles, the UN Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) stated in its May Closure Update.
During the reporting period to April 2008 some 103 obstacles were
removed but 144 were added.
However, the number of "flying" or random checkpoints fell when compared
with the previous eight months.
"The issue is not just the number of roadblocks, but also the quality
and the other factors which block movement as well," said Allegra
Pacheco, deputy head of OCHA in the Palestinian territories.
"For example, the Israeli military removed al-Fahs checkpoint, though
just one, [the checkpoint was] significantly [affecting] a major trade
route for Palestinians in the southern West Bank," Pacheco said.
As part of the renewed peace process, announced last November, the
Israeli occupation government pledged to ease the restrictions.
"The government of Israel is committed to taking down checkpoints to try
to create greater movement and access for the Palestinians.
Simultaneously, we have an obligation to protect our civilian population
from terror attacks," Mark Regev, the spokesman for the Prime Minister's
office, told IRIN.
"Our challenge is to find the right balance. We are willing to take
calculated risks," Regev said.
Accessing key arteries within the West Bank remains a problem and some
major roads are off limits to most Palestinians. Also, Israel continues
to restrict access for most Palestinians to East Jerusalem, the Jordan
Valley and areas between the barrier and the Green Line - the
internationally recognised border of Israel and the Palestinian
territory.
In April, the Israeli occupation government announced it had removed 61
obstacles in the West Bank, though OCHA said that only 44 had been taken
away and 11 had never existed. Of the 44, only five were deemed to be
significant, leaving the agency to conclude that the move had "little or
no impact on movement and access in the West Bank".
Furthermore, there was an increase in the number and duration of curfews
in the northern West Bank and in general in that region there was an
overall deterioration in access.
"The curfews could not be fully imposed
without the roadblocks and other existing mechanism for restricting
movement," said Pacheco.
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