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Israel's Outposts Seal Death of
Palestinian State |
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Posted By
Jonathan Cook in Migron, West Bank August
25, 2008
Yehudit Genud hardly feels she is on the
frontier of Israel’s settlement project,
although the huddle of mobile homes on a
wind-swept West Bank hilltop she calls home is
controversial even by Israeli standards.
Despite the size and isolation of Migron, a
settlement of about 45 religious families on a
ridge next to the Palestinian city of
Ramallah, Mrs Genud’s job as a social worker
in West Jerusalem is a 25-minute drive away on
a well-paved road.
Mrs Genud, 28, pregnant with her first child,
points out that Migron has parks, children’s
playgrounds, a kindergarten, a daycare centre
and a synagogue, all paid for by the
government -- even if the buildings are
enclosed by a razor-wire fence, and her
husband, Roni, has to put in overtime as the
settlement’s security guard.
From her trailer, she also has panoramic views
not only of Ramallah but of the many
communities hugging the slopes that gently
fall away to the Jordan Valley.
Long-established Palestinian villages are
instantly identifiable by their homes’ flat
roofs and the prominence of the tall minarets
of the local mosques. Interspersed among them,
however, are a growing number of much newer,
fortified communities of luxury villas topped
by distinctive red-tiled roofs.
These are the Jewish settlements that now form
an almost complete ring around Palestinian
East Jerusalem, cutting it off from the rest
of the West Bank and destroying any hope that
the city will one day become the capital of a
Palestinian state.
“These settlements are supposed to be the nail
in the coffin of any future peace agreement
with the Palestinians,” said Dror Etkes, a
veteran observer of the settlements who works
for the Israeli human rights group Yesh Din.
“Their purpose is to make a Palestinian state
unviable.”
The majority of the half a million settlers in
the West Bank and East Jerusalem, according to
Mr Etkes, are “economic opportunists”, drawn
to life in the occupied territories less by
ideological or religious convictions than
economic incentives. The homes, municipal
services and schools there are heavily
subsidised by the government.
In addition, the settlements -- though illegal
under international law -- are integrated into
Israel through a sophisticated system of roads
that make it easy for the settlers to forget
they are in occupied territory surrounded by
Palestinians.
But Migron, with its supposed links to the
Biblical site where King Saul based himself
during his fight against the Philistines,
attracts a different kind of inhabitant.
“This place is holy to the Jewish people and
we have a duty to be here,” Mrs Genud said.
“The whole land of Israel belongs to us and we
should not be afraid to live wherever we want
to. The Arabs must accept that.”
Unlike the 150 or so official settlements
dotted across the West Bank, Migron is an
example of what the Israeli government refers
to as an “illegal outpost”, often an
unauthorised outgrowth from one of the main
settlements. Today there are more than 100
such outposts, housing several thousand
extremist settlers.
Mrs Genud, however, argues that Israel’s
refusal to turn Migron into an authorised
settlement, as it has done with many other
established outposts, reflects pressure from
Washington.
Back in 2003, Israel committed itself to
dismantling the more recent outposts under the
terms of the Road Map, a US-sponsored plan for
reviving the peace process and creating a
Palestinian state. Two years later the cabinet
approved the removal of 24 outposts, although
barely any progress has been made on
dismantling them. Israel confirmed its pledge
again in January when George W Bush, the US
president, visited.
Established six years ago by a group from the
nearby settlement of Ofra, Migron is now the
largest of the outposts. Two residents -- Itai
Halevi, the community’s rabbi, and Itai Harel,
the son of Israel Harel, a well-known settler
leader -- have demonstrated their confidence
in Migron’s future by each building permanent
homes.
“We are connected to the water grid, we have
phone lines from the national company Bezeq,
we have been hooked up by the electricity
company and have street lighting,” Mrs Genud
said. “We also have a kindergarten paid for by
the state and a group of soldiers stationed
here to protect us. How can we be ‘illegal’?”
Daniella Wiess, a leader of the most extreme
wing of the settlers, agreed. Like the
inhabitants of Migron, she said the outpost
was first suggested by Ariel Sharon when he
was housing minister in the 1990s. It was also
among the first outposts to be set up after he
became prime minister in 2002.
An official report published in 2005 found
that more than $4 million was invested in
Migron in its first years, with the money
channelled through at least six different
ministries.
There is good reason for official complicity
in such outposts as Migron. “This place is
very strategic,” Mrs Genud said. It looks down
on Route 60, once the main road serving
Palestinians between Jerusalem and Jenin in
the northern West Bank.
Today, even those Palestinians who can get a
permit to travel the road find regular
sections obstructed by checkpoints or closed
for the protection of neighbouring
settlements.
“We can also see all the Arabs from here and
keep an eye on what they are doing,” she said
referring to her Palestinian neighbours. “And
in addition, we can see the other settlements
and check on their safety.”
But despite its significance to the settlement
drive, Migron is under threat. Last week, the
Israeli government agreed that the outpost
must be destroyed, although it was
tight-lipped about when. Few are expecting
such a reversal to happen soon. The
government’s decision was largely foisted upon
it by a series of unforeseen events.
In 2006, several West Bank Palestinians,
backed by Israeli peace groups, petitioned
Israel’s supreme court claiming that Migron
had been built on their private land.
Over the past four decades, Israel has
declared nearly two-thirds of the West Bank as
“state land”, seizing it on a variety of
pretexts and transferring much of it to the
jurisdiction of settler councils. According to
the figures of the Israeli group Peace Now,
the settlers are in direct control of more
than 40 per cent of the West Bank.
Land belonging to Palestinians who hold the
title deeds, however, has been harder to
confiscate. As a result, a dubious industry of
front companies both inside Israel and in the
occupied territories has been spawned to
transfer private Palestinian land to the
settlers.
One such company appears to be behind the sale
of the land on which Migron was built. A
police investigation has revealed that one of
the Palestinian owners, Abdel Latif Hassan
Sumarin, signed over his power of attorney to
an Israeli real estate company in 2004, even
though he died in the United States in 1961.
During the court hearings, Israel has been
dragging its feet. According to its own
figures, there are a dozen outposts built
entirely or partially on private Palestinian
land -- and the true number may be higher
still.
The settlers believe that the decision to
destroy Migron, if carried out, would set a
dangerous precedent. “They are very afraid
that this will become simply the first of many
settlements to fall,” Mr Etkes said.
Last week, faced with another hearing before
the court, the government finally conceded on
Migron -- but only after striking a deal with
the main settlement lobby group, the Yesha
council. Israel promised that the outpost
would go, but not before new homes had been
built for Migron’s settlers and they had been
relocated en masse to a newly created -- and
authorised -- settlement. According to reports
in the local media, Migron’s families may be
moved only a few hundred metres from their
current location to an area of the West Bank
designated as “state land”.
“The settlers know that preparation of an
alternative site could take years,” said Yariv
Oppenheimer, the head of Peace Now, fearful
that this was simply a delaying tactic.
Others believe that relocating Migron may, in
fact, set back the struggle against the
settlements. There is already talk of moving
the settlers to the jurisdiction of a
neighbouring settlement, Adam.
“The danger is that Migron will be destroyed
only to be resurrected in ‘legalised’ form by
the government as a new settlement close by
Adam,” Mr Etkes said.
Such a suspicion is confirmed by the main
settler council, Yesha, which issued a
statement last week: “We believe it is
possible to find a solution for the outposts
that will strengthen the settlements.”
Nonetheless, the residents of Migron, backed
by hardline settler groups, are talking and
acting tough for the time being. In a show of
defiance, they moved another mobile home into
the outpost last week. For several months the
residents have also been erecting a large
stone building close by the outpost that will
become a winery.
The settlers’ rabbinical council denounced the
threatened loss of the outpost, as did settler
leader Gershon Masika, who warned of a bloody
confrontation to save it.
Mrs Genud is not sure what she will do if the
crunch comes and she has to give up her home
and life in Migron. “All of this land is
Jewish,” she said. “It would be a big mistake
if we give up what is rightfully ours.”
Jonathan Cook is a journalist and writer
living in Nazareth, Israel. His latest books
are "Israel and the Clash of Civilisations:
Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle
East" (Pluto Press) and "Disappearing
Palestine: Israel's Experiments in Human
Despair" (Zed Books). His website is
www.jkcook.net.
The Author requires it's stated that this
article originally appeared in The National
(http://www.thenational.ae), published in Abu
Dhabi. |
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