HOME
DV NEWS
SERVICE ARCHIVE SUBMISSIONS/CONTACT ABOUT DV
by
Yigal Bronner
When
Israel's finance minister Binyamin Netanyahu was interviewed for the radio on
the morning after the horrific terror attack on Cafe Hillel in Jerusalem he was
asked whether this was the right time for cutbacks in the military budget. In
answer to this question Netanyahu promised, once again, that the money set
aside for the so-called "separation fence" would not be affected by
the cutback - on the contrary it would be flowing faster so as to speed up
construction. This, he said, would be done to ensure the safety of the citizens
of Israel. It did not even occur to the interviewer to ask whether the fence
would actually lead to peace and security. As is the case with other related
issues, when violence escalates and the debate becomes emotionally charged, it
becomes impossible to express any other opinion. Israel's political parties,
across the board, from Meretz to the Likud, are vying in their expressions of
support for the "fence". One of the most dramatic geo-political
changes in the history of the region is taking place in the absence of any
public debate. We must stop and look through the fog of lies concerning this
wall.
The
first lie comes in the shape of the name, "separation fence". This
notion promises the worried and exhausted Israeli public that the Palestinians,
together with all the misery in our dealings with them, will be "behind
the fence". Us here, them there - and peace to all. But the fence does not
really mean separation between Palestinians and Israelis. On the contrary. The
wall that is under construction will lead to the annexation by Israel of a
considerable percent of the West Bank. On the western, Israeli, side of the
fence hundreds of thousands of Palestinians will remain. On the eastern,
Palestinian, side, there will be thousands of Jewish settlers. So separation
this isn't.
The
second lie is that what we have here is a fence that constitutes a border on
whose eastern side the "Palestinian state" about which Sharon likes
to talk will be established. For the idea is not of one fence but rather of, at
least, two sets of walls. And while one of them, the one on the west side, will
steal as many kilometers as possible of Palestinian land alongside the Green
Line, the other - on the eastern side - will annex the remoter settlements,
like Ariel and Kiryat Arbah. Between these two walls there will be various
types of obstacles, fences and trenches. This set up will irreversibly turn the
West Bank's centers of population into isolated human cages. What this amounts
to is not a state but a smattering of ghettos.
Take
Jerusalem, for example. The wall that is being erected there does not coincide
with the dividing line that runs between the city's Palestinian and Jewish
neighborhoods. It cuts all of the former into two. In doing so it will annex
well over 100,000 Palestinians. Moreover, hundreds of thousands Palestinians
will be left outside the fence, the majority of whom are residents of
Jerusalem, in the possession of a valid Israeli ID card, whose life is wholly
involved with and dependent upon the city. These people will not only be prevented
from entering the city and, thus, reaching the source of their livelihood,
their centers of education and hospitals - they will also be unable to turn
eastward instead.
For
to the east they will be surrounded by walls and roads built to envelope
Ma'aleh Adumim, Pisgat Zeev, Nokdim and Tekoa.
It
is hard to describe the vast variety of humanitarian problems that these walls
will create on the eastern side of metropolitan Jerusalem which will be cut up
into a many-branched system of enclosures. But the Israeli public is not
willing to consider this humanitarian issue because they have been promised
that the fence will finally bring the longed-for security. And that's the third
lie about the wall. Again, a glimpse at the Jerusalem area is instructive.
During the present Intifada, East Jerusalem has been the most quiet Palestinian
area. The wall, which will cut through families and streets alike, will harvest
a great number of people who have nothing left to lose. Tens of thousands of
Palestinians, once annexed to Israel, will be disconnected from their brothers,
while, at the same time, the settlers' drive for domination will only intensify
(they are already at Har Homa, Jabel Mukkaber, Ras el Ammud, Sheikh Jarrakh,
the Muslim Quarter of the Old City, etc.). The demolition project of
Palestinian houses will receive a serious boost and the government will do
anything in its power to push out Palestinian citizen. What we have here is a
huge barrel full of explosives. Instead of removing Ramallah and Bethlehem from
Jerusalem, the wall will in fact import them into the city.
Obviously,
the problems are not restricted to Jerusalem. And there are also areas - though
few in number - in which the fence will be constructed on the Green Line,
without annexing Palestinian land and its inhabitants. This for instance will
be the case in Kalkilyah and Tulkarm. But those who delude themselves with the
thought that the fence will bring security there are mistaken. Believers in the
fence point, time and again, at the example of the Gaza Strip. This is, indeed,
a fascinating case. Gaza, which is encircled by a fence, is virtually under
lock and bolt thanks to a handful of settlements that together have control
over a substantial proportion of the land. It is so peaceful over there that
the IDF constantly lobbies for a large scale invasion, while its airforce is
engaged in the continuous of shelling of the place. The fence-made security
enjoyed by the people of Sderot and Ashkelon, who come under fire from
make-shift missiles, is also widely renowned. As long as the occupation
continues the people of Gaza will go on resisting it and it is only a matter of
time until they find more sophisticated weapons and better ways to dig their
way through, underneath and above the fences.
Exploiting
the genuine security related worries of the Israeli people and the majority's
wish for a political parting from the Palestinians, the Sharon government is
constructing a system of fences that will not achieve separation, that will not
draw a border, and that will not, eventually, bring security. What we are
facing in the "fence" is yet another typical, thoroughly calculated
"Sharonic" act of deception. The real purpose of the walls is very
different. They are intended as another layer - maybe the ultimate one - in the
complex matrix of control which constitutes the Israeli occupation: the
settlements, the roads, the roadblocks, the curfews, the closures, and the use
of brute military force. The walls that Sharon is building now are intended to
render Israel's hold over the land it captured in 1967 irreversible. They are
the last nail in the coffin of the two-states solution. We shall wake up, in
another year and a half from now, to a drastically different reality: a cruel
state consisting of pens enclosures will stretch between the Jordan river and
the Mediterranean. A state besides which South-Africa's apartheid pales into
insignificance. Violence will not merely fail to be reduced - it will increase,
hatred and racism will intensify. The outcome of this is too terrifying to
contemplate.
----
Yigal Bronner teaches South
Asian studies at the Tel-Aviv University and is an activist in Ta'ayush --
Arab-Jewish Partnership (http://taayush.tripod.com/new/index-temp.html).