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           |  | UN Fact-Finding Mission About Illegal Israeli 
	Settlement:
 Just Another Distraction from the Occupation
 
 By 
	Adam Keller
 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, March 26, 2012
 
 
 Country Crazy: The Palestinian Houdini
 What is this? A UN fact-finding mission to inquire into the settlements 
	on the West Bank? What, bother us again with settlements and occupation? 
	Don't they know at the UN that we had long since left this issue behind us?http://adam-keller2.blogspot.com/
 – The social protest drew attention away from the occupation.
 
 –The war against Iran, which will or will not take place, anyway distracted 
	attention away from the social protest.
 
 –The exchange of fire around 
	on the Gaza border diverted attention away from the war against Iran.
 
 –The war against Iran came back and again took the focus and made us 
	forget the Gaza exchange of fire.
 
 –The Toulouse killing spree 
	diverting attention from the war against Iran and the Gaza exchange of fire 
	and the social protest.
 
 –And now, after all this, we go again to deal 
	with the occupation and the settlements? The cabinet ministers of the 
	Government of Israel are bothered and must neglect the really important 
	things and enter once again into debates on this banal and well-chewed 
	issue! Can't you find something new, something original, to put on the 
	agenda?
 
 And besides, just last week the veteran and experienced 
	commentator Ben Kaspit wrote in his weekly column in Ma'ariv newspaper: 
	"Netanyahu deserves credit for what he did the last two years, when he 
	managed to kill the Palestinian issue and place instead the issue of Iran at 
	the top of the global agenda. This is an important, significant and 
	strategic achievement".
 
 Can it be that such a clear, incisive 
	statement would be disproven within less than a week? Could it be that Ben 
	Kaspit and the other well-informed commentators have been all wrong? 
	Netanyahu made confirmed kill of the Palestinian issue - and now this 
	stubborn issue suddenly opens the coffin lid and rises out of the grave, in 
	front of our boggling eyes? What is this, a new Houdini? Really, can anyone 
	explain what's going on here?
 
 The history of Migron or: what is there 
	to investigate?
 
 In 2002, Israeli settlers in the area east of 
	Ramallah complained of not having good reception on their cell phone. The 
	phone company understood their plight and established for their benefit an 
	antenna on a hill overlooking the Route 60, which is the main highway 
	connecting the northern West Bank with the south.
 
 The antenna was 
	established on land owned by Palestinians from the nearby villages of Burqa 
	and Deir Dibwan. Unlike in many other places in the West Bank, here the 
	Israeli authorities do not dispute the land being privately owned by 
	Palestinians - but the company did not bother to ask the landowners' 
	permission to build the antenna. And then, a trailer was brought in, where a 
	guard was placed to keep an eye on the antenna - a young settler from a 
	nearby settlement. Then another trailer arrived, with another guard. Then 
	the guards felt lonely there on the hill and brought their wives and their 
	children to live with them and participate in the guarding work. And then, 
	more and more guards arrived - 45 in all, each of them living in a trailer 
	of his own and sharing the guarding duty with his own wife and children. In 
	order to have place for all the trailers of all those guards and their 
	families, the Ministry of Housing of the State of Israel took care to plough 
	up and flatten the hilltop area and pave several access roads and connect 
	all trailers to electricity and water.
 
 Then all the guards banded up 
	to erect a perimeter fence, enclosing a considerable parcel of land in a 
	wide circle on all sides of the antenna, so as to better guard it. The 
	enclosed area was entirely in privately owned land of Palestinian residents, 
	duly recorded in the land registry office and recognized by the State of 
	Israel. When the landowners arrived, ownership deeds in hand, and tried to 
	enter their land, they were warned by the antenna guards (and by the 
	soldiers stationed there to guard the antenna guards) that anybody entering 
	the closed military zone around the antenna would be liable to be detained 
	or shot.
 
 After about a year the Antenna Guards stopped calling 
	themselves that, and formally announced that they have established a 
	settlement outpost called Migron. The name Migron comes from the Bible, 
	which recounts that at a place called so King Saul had conducted a heroic 
	battle a bit more than three thousand years ago, and historians believe it 
	was somewhere in the general vicinity of the hill with the antenna. And so, 
	there was no more talking of guarding and preserving a cell phone antenna. 
	Rather, residents of the sixty trailers regarded themselves as engaged in a 
	far more important and sublime guarding mission, i.e. to maintain and 
	sustain an ancient Jewish tradition, three thousand years old, and be worthy 
	heirs to King Saul.
 
 In 2003, then Prime Minister Ariel Sharon 
	solemnly promised to U.S. President George W. Bush that he would dismantle 
	all settlement outposts established after 2001. Migron was definitely on 
	that list, along with several dozen other outposts throughout the 
	territories. But there had already been a previous Israeli Prime Minister 
	who said "I promised, but I did not promise to keep my promise." President 
	Bush did not really press the issue, and the outpost of Migron remained 
	intact and continued to expand, and in the nearby village residents were 
	left with ownership deeds in hand.
 
 And in 2006 the landowners, 
	together with the Israeli Peace Now movement, appealed to the Supreme Court 
	of Israel. And the wheels of justice went grinding very slowly and 
	leisurely, and the judges were in no hurry to render a verdict. The State's 
	representatives clarified to the court that there was no dispute about the 
	trailers structures having been erected illegally, on land which did not 
	belong to those now living in them and without the legal owners' consent. 
	Therefore, the state duly issued demolition orders for these illegal 
	structures.
 
 After a year the State told the court that the 
	demolition orders had not yet been carried out, as the military authorities 
	faced manpower shortages and decided to give precedence to other locations. 
	And when the judges inquired, after the passage of another year, it turned 
	out that the manpower problem had not yet been resolved. Meanwhile, the 
	government approached the Migron residents and offered to build them 
	beautiful houses in another settlement if they consent to move there. But 
	they rejected the offer out of hand and said that they would never abandon 
	the legacy of King Saul and the location where the King fought and defeated 
	his ancient enemies 3000 years ago.
 
 In 2011 the Supreme Court judges 
	have had enough and they issued a definite ruling, ordering the state to 
	evacuate the Migron outpost no later than March 30, 2012. And the Migron 
	settlers cried out bitterly that the state was about to destroy a prosperous 
	and vibrant community and uproot children from their childhood homes, and 
	that the Jewish people was about to lose their foothold on the patrimony of 
	King Saul, Father of the Nation. And also, the settlers asserted that the 
	Arabs living in Burqa and Deir Dibwan - who are the owners of the land - 
	that the ownership deeds in their possession were not valid and that the 
	land had been granted in the 1960's by King Hussein of Jordan to his local 
	favorites and that this royal favoritism should be annulled and disregarded.
 
 And around the famous antenna the settlers banners reading "In Migron 
	the war will start", and they enlisted the help of many Knesset Members who 
	support the Netanyahu Government as well as several of his cabinet 
	ministers. And all these threatened in earnest to undermine the stability of 
	the government if, God forbid, the outpost is destroyed.
 
 Meanwhile, 
	Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu charged Minister Benny Begin with 
	mediating between the government and the Migron settlers, and Begin duly 
	came up with a 'compromise' proposal. By the terms of this compromise, there 
	shall be established a brand new settlement kilometers away, and its 
	construction would last until November 2015, and until then the Migron 
	settlers would remain at their present location, and when they move to their 
	new homes the land would not be returned to the Palestinian owners but would 
	remain in possession of the army, and the trailers would remain in place and 
	some form of civil use would be made of them (Perhaps to house a new 
	generation of antenna guards...)
 
 At first the Migron settlers 
	bitterly rejected out of hand this humiliating compromise, and reiterated 
	that by no means would they leave the patrimony of King Saul. But when the 
	target date drew near they announced that with an aching heart they do agree 
	to the painful compromise, so as to avert a violent conflict. Two days ago, 
	on Thursday March 22, a representatives of the State and the settlers 
	arrived together at the Supreme Court and asked the judges to accept and 
	formally approve this compromise, in the cause of peace and of bringing 
	people closer together.
 
 By coincidence, that was the very same day 
	that the United Nations Human Rights Council convened in Geneva and resolved 
	to appoint a fact finding mission to look into the process of settlement 
	construction by Israel and its impact on the lives of Palestinians in the 
	Occupied Territories.
 
 In fact, the United Nations could save its time 
	and resources. All that UN personnel need to do is read the story of the 
	Migron outpost, available online for all to read.
 
 
 
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