Head of Red Cross, Matteo Benatti, Denounces
Violence of Illegal Israeli Settlers and Soldiers in Hebron
Red Cross: "Illegal settlements cause hardship for
Palestinians"
Date: 21 / 06 / 2009 Time: 20:55
Hebron – Ma’an
–
A Red Cross official has denounced the violence of
Israeli settlers and soldiers in the West Bank city of Hebron in
unusually stark terms in an interview posted to
the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) website.
Matteo Benatti, who has been head of the ICRC's office in Hebron
since September 2007, focused on the day-to-day consequences for
Palestinians in explaining the situation The interview appears alongside
a statement that “It is unlawful under the Fourth Geneva Convention for
an occupying power to transfer parts of its own population into the
territory it occupies.”
The following is the full text of the
question and answer session:
What are the humanitarian issues in
Hebron?
The settlements have made many aspects of life very
difficult for Palestinians. In the old city of Hebron, about 600
settlers live in colonies, in close proximity to some 30,000
Palestinians. The Israeli authorities impose tight security measures and
have set up many checkpoints in this area of the city, which includes
the Cave of the Patriarchs, an important place of worship for both Jews
and Muslims. A number of roads are closed to the Palestinians and they
are not allowed to bring cars into the areas where they live.
Movement restrictions, together with recurrent violence by settlers, are
affecting the Palestinians in their daily life.
How does this
affect them?
Hundreds of Palestinian families have to pass
checkpoints in order to buy food, for instance. They often face
intimidation by settlers at the checkpoints. Women are particularly
vulnerable to this form of abuse, the more so because Palestinians are
not allowed to drive along many of these streets, forcing women to cross
the checkpoints on foot. Because of closed roads, old people are forced
to lug shopping bags over extended distances.
Ambulances taking
Palestinian residents to hospital in emergencies can face long delays at
checkpoints. Families have been forced to carry their sick relatives on
stretchers or use donkeys to transport them to a pickup point where an
ambulance is waiting.
The economic life of the old city has
almost died out because of movement restrictions and settler violence.
Some shopkeepers have been ordered to close down by the army. Others
have lost their customers, because Palestinians are afraid to go close
to the Jewish settlements. Poverty is rampant. According to an ICRC
study of households in the restricted areas of the old city last summer,
86 percent of families live in relative poverty, as they have only $ 97
per person per month for food, clothes and all other living expenses.
Most Palestinians living in the old city have had to put wire in
front of their windows and have to keep them shut as they risk having
urine, rotten vegetables or stones thrown at them through the windows.
For children, even the daily walk to school can be frightening, as
settlers may threaten them or throw stones. It is extremely tiring for
families to live in this constant atmosphere of tension.
What is
the ICRC able to do in this kind of situation?
We regularly
receive calls from Palestinian families in the middle of the night who
are being attacked by settlers or are desperately waiting for an
ambulance stuck at a checkpoint. When people are in difficulty, we
liaise with the local civil administration and with the Israeli armed
forces. Luckily, this does help in many instances, and in general I
think we have a good working relationship with the local Israeli
authorities.
We are also able to help families in practical
ways. We provide close to 7,000 people with food every month, for
instance. In addition, a number of families have received bee hives and
produce excellent honey for themselves and for the market. We have
helped establish roof gardens for others so that they can grow their own
fresh vegetables. Of course, this is not a real solution to their
problems, but it does help to alleviate their difficult economic
situation.
Under international humanitarian law, the Israeli
authorities, as an occupying power, must ensure the provision of food
and medical care to the population under occupation, as well as public
order and safety. For us at the ICRC, it is frustrating that we are not
able to help as much as we would like and that we see no improvement.
That being said, we are still hopeful that the restrictions on movement
will ease.
What is the situation in the southern area of the
West Bank?
The most southern area of the West Bank, Masafer
Yatta, is also a hotspot of settler violence. This area is home to
thousands of herders and Bedouins who are used to moving around freely
in the grazing areas with their sheep and goats. People looking after
the animals, including women and children, are often attacked. Some
villages are also situated in what has become an Israeli military
training area and it can be quite dangerous to move around.
To
make matters worse, the climate is extremely harsh. The land is arid and
barren and the hills only take on a slightly green tinge for a couple of
months in spring. A number of the families have had to reduce the size
of their herds because they could not find enough food and water.
How do families manage under such harsh conditions?
Coping is
becoming increasingly difficult. It looks like we are heading for
another drought this year, which compounds the fact that many of the
families in the Southern Hebron Hills suffer from a chronic lack of
water. The Israeli authorities do not allow Palestinians to build new
rainwater cisterns, so the ICRC provides mobile water tanks for those
families with the most acute problems.
This reduces the time they
spend fetching water, as the tanks can normally hold a week’s drinking
water. Families used to pay someone else with a water tank to bring
water to them – and this can be quite expensive. Now, they can save this
money for other essentials.
The original post can be found
at:
http://www.icrc.org/web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/html/palestine-interview-090609
Another Palestinian in Old Jerusalem forced by Israeli troops
to demolish own home
Sunday June 21, 2009 23:04 by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC News
Muhammad Najib Al-Ju’aba, who has lived with his family for
generations on Virgin Street near the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in
Jerusalem, was forced by Israeli troops to demolish his own home this
weekend, making the third home demolished in this way this week alone.
Israeli demolition orders in Jerusalem have increased exponentially
since Binyamin Netanyahu, a right-wing Israeli leader who campaigned on
'no compromise' with the Palestinians, came to power in March.
The military allegedly acted on orders from the Israeli Municipality
of Jerusalem (there are currently two Jerusalem municipalities – one
Israeli, one Palestinian, but only the Israeli one has armed enforcement
agents and a military).
Al-Juba was told that he must demolish his home or pay 13,000 Israeli
shekels to the Israeli Jerusalem Municipal government. The reason given
was the extra room that Al-Juba had constructed to accommodate his
growing family.
90% of Israeli home demolitions of Palestinian homes are
'administrative demolitions', in which Palestinians are told that they
do not have a permit or are in a 'closed military zone' and therefore
their homes must be demolished. Extremely few permits have been issued
(less than 1% of applicants) to Palestinians since 1967, when Israeli
forces took over East Jerusalem and the rest of historic Palestine (now
known as the West Bank and Gaza Strip). The other 10% are punitive
demolitions, in which Israeli forces demolish the home of family members
of a Palestinian known to have attacked Israeli civilians or soldiers.
The area around the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is particularly
contentious, as Israel has made public its plans to completely take over
this section of the Old City, as well as East Jerusalem, in a flagrant
violation of signed agreements and international law.
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