February 06, 2006

"We take the land first and the law comes after"

Teddy Kolleck,
Mayor of Jerusalem, 1965 to 1993

This is especially so in East Jerusalem. Israel has turned it into an art form - and now I am in the middle of it.

Now the London Guardian has spelt it out :

Bollens says about 40% of East Jerusalem is designated as a green zone, but that
this is really a mechanism for land transfer. "The government calls it a
green zone to stop Palestinians building homes there, and then when the
government wants to develop an area [as Jewish] it lifts that green zoning
miraculously and it becomes a development place."

"Worlds Apart",The Guardian, February 6, 2006

So the progression is :

Palestinian Land becomes "Green Zone"

=> Palestinians not allowed to build

=> Triggers Absentee Property Law

=> Formal Appropriation by Israel

=> "Development Plan" (for Jews Only)

=> "Facts on the Ground"

=> Hemmed in Bantustans

= APARTHEID

That is the only place this is leading - two separate, communities living in the same state, only one of which has citizenship and effective property rights.

Israel hates the comparison, but as the two state solution dies its slow sad death people are starting to notice :

Ronnie Kasrils on Israeli Apartheid

Yet let me declare without hyperbole that the violence of the apartheid regime,
as inhuman as it was, "was a picnic" (in the words of Archbishop Desmond
Tutu) in comparison with the utter brutality of Israel’s occupation of Palestine.

Ronnie Kasrils MP
(Jewish) Minister for Intelligence, Republic of South Africa

"They Are Treating People Here like Arabs"

An excellent article from Haaretz today summed up the Israeli settlement movement

For almost 40 years they have been enjoying an ongoing supply of political and economic support, military protection and legal backing. And then one fine day, without prior warning, someone decided to turn off the faucet.

But the settlement project is approaching a tipping point - they are starting to lose the support of the Israeli public.

Maybe a red line has been crossed at Amona, as the settlers fought in defiance of a Supreme Court Order. The settlers certainly absorb alot of government money considering that they only recognise the law when it suits them.

One Australian activist has noticed the change :
People have told me "only a few years ago settlers were still seen as
heroes" now it seems to be a selling point in the election who can be most
harsh to the settlers
LINK

You can tell that the settlers are worried - one leader complained that the gobvernment had

"They are treating people here like Arabs"

Israeli MP Arieh Eldad, Israeli Radio, February 2 2006


No they're not - if you were treated like Arabs you'd be dead.

February 03, 2006

"The Bulldozer" hits Bethlehem!

My fiancee Richelle was so moved by her experience in Israel / Palestine that she signed up for a 10 week internship at the Israeli Committee against Housing Demolitions, in Jerusalem, starting January 2006.

After a week in Jerusalem Richelle visited Bethlehem to check on the land. This is what she found :

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The settler is gone, but so is the house !

The neighbours confirmed that Israeli bulldozers demolished the house 1 week previously. We made the news :

IMEMC & Agencies - Monday, 16 January 2006, 17:21
Israeli bulldozers demolished on Monday morning a Palestinian housing building at the
northern entrance of the West Bank city of Bethlehem, near Rachel's Tomb.The
Jerusalem municipality alleged that this building was built without building
permit, soldiers blocked the area and prevented the residents from approaching
the building, local sources reported.Residents denied the alleged absence of
building permit and said that this demolition is part of the Israeli policy to
control the Bethlehem area.