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UN says Israel didn't remove checkpoints as claimed
Date: 03 / 06 / 2009 Time: 13:40 Bethlehem –
Ma’an –
United Nations officials found that the Israeli occupation government
did not dismantle two West Bank military checkpoints as promised on
Wednesday.
UN teams found that the Atara checkpoint in the
village of Bir Zeit, on the main route between Ramallah and Nablus, was
physically intact, including a concrete watchtower. The United Nations
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reports that
they will re-classify the installation as a “partial checkpoint,” since
the Israeli military has decided not to impose 24-hour checks.
The other checkpoint the Israeli military said it would remove is At-Tayba
(referred to as Rimonim by the army), near the village of the same name.
The physical apparatus of this roadblock, already classified as a
partial checkpoint, was still place when an OCHA team visited on
Wednesday.
The Israeli army also began work on Wednesday
enlarging a third checkpoint, Enav, near the West Bank city of Tulkarem.
Israeli forces closed the road and were seen adding lanes and physical
infrastructure to the checkpoint.
OCHA earlier said it had
received confirmation of the plan to remove the checkpoints from both
the Israeli army and the Palestinian liaison office.
According to
OCHA Israel maintains more than 700 military checkpoints, roadblocks,
gates, fences, trenches, earth mounds, and other obstructions to
Palestinian movement as a part of the occupation of the West Bank.
Sources in the Palestinian liaison department in Ramallah said that
the Israelis informed them two days ago that both checkpoints would be
removed as part of a purported attempt to ease Palestinian life.
The sources told Ma’an that Israeli authorities intend to keep a guard
post in the area of Atara checkpoint.
These Palestinian sources
welcomed any step towards easing Palestinian suffering, however they
said what Israeli authorities did was insufficient as there are still
dozens of military checkpoints across the West Bank.
Another
Palestinian official source, who preferred not to be named, suspected
the announcement was a media ploy. The source said it only came as
attempt to influence in advance any US demands from Israel to ease
pressure on the Palestinians.
The Israeli army said in a
statement that the decision to “remove” the two checkpoints was taken
following a meeting on Monday between the General Gadi Shamni Brigadier
General Noam Tibon, Head of the Civil Administration Yoav Mordechai, and
the Palestinian Authority’s civil affairs chief Hussein Ash-Sheikh.
A decision was also made during the meeting, the army said, to open
the Asira Ash-Shamaliya checkpoint, north of Nablus, to traffic 24 hours
a day.
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