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Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon traveled to the USA as a hero of peace, as if he
had already evacuated Gaza and only the follow-up remained to be worked out.
What has completely disappeared from the public agenda is what is happening
meanwhile in the West Bank. The media continue to deluge us daily with
disengagement storms, like the
Nitzanim bubble. But for now the disengagement plan exists only
on paper. On the ground, no settler has yet received compensation. Even
those who agreed to accept compensation are now waiting, because if they
have a chance to get Nitzanim -- the pearl of Israeli real estate -- why
hurry? In the meantime, three and a half months before the projected date of
evacuation, it is still not clear where the evacuees will be housed until
the discussions regarding their final relocation destination are concluded.
Contrary to the prevailing impression, no infrastructure has been set up
even for their temporary dwellings. “The Settlement Department of the Jewish
Agency, responsible for providing the ‘caravillas’ [the caravans that were
supposed to host the evacuated settlers temporarily] has so far received no
order from the government.” (Yediot Ahronot, 8 April 2005)
If Sharon intends to evacuate the Gaza
settlements, he is doing so with outrageous inefficiency. He is far more
efficient in the West Bank. There, plans are carried out precisely as
scheduled. Right from the start, during the first agreements between Sharon
and Netanyahu one year ago about the disengagement plan, it was agreed that
the disengagement would not be put into effect before the “separation fence”
was completed on the western side of the West Bank. [1]
Indeed, the construction of the wall is moving towards completion. In July,
the announced date for the beginning of the Gaza evacuation, the wall
surrounding East Jerusalem and cutting it off from the West Bank will be in
place. The Palestinians who live there will be able to leave only with
permits. The center of life in the West Bank will become an enclosed prison.
As well, the northern wall, which has already imprisoned the residents of
Tul Karem, Qalqilya and Mas’ha, and which has robbed them of their lands,
continues to advance southwards. Now the bulldozers are headed for the lands
of Bil’in and Safa, bordering the settlements of Modi’in Elit. The farmers
who are losing their land are trying to stand their ground, together with
Israeli opponents of the wall. But who would hear about their sufferings and
about their struggle amid the tumult over the disengagement?
The disengagement plan was born in February 2004, at the height of a wave of
international criticism over the wall project, on the eve of the opening of
deliberations at the international court in The Hague. In the ruling that
was handed down in July, the court determined that the route of the wall was
a blatant and serious violation of international law. Moreover, the court
indicated that there was a danger of “a further change in the demographic
composition as a result of the departure of the Palestinian population from
certain areas.” (paragraph 122) In other words, the court warned of a
process of transfer.
According to UN data, 237,000 Palestinians will be trapped between the wall
and the Green Line and 160,000 others will remain on the Palestinian side,
cut off from their land. (The route that was approved at the government’s
meeting in February 2005 reduces their number only slightly).
[2] What is to be expected for those people, for the farmers who
lose their land, for the imprisoned that are cut off from their families and
their livelihoods? In the ghost towns of Tul Karem and Qalqilya and the
villages around Mas’ha, many have already left in order to seek subsistence
on the edges of towns in the center of the West Bank. How much longer will
the others be able to hold on under conditions of despair and atrophy,
inside villages which have become prisons?
“Transfer” is associated in the collective memory with trucks arriving at
night to take Palestinians across the border, as occurred in some places in
1948. But behind the smoke screen of disengagement, a process of slow and
hidden transfer is being carried out in the West Bank today. It is not easy
to judge which method of “transferring” people from their land is crueler.
Nearly 400,000 people, about half the number of Palestinians who were forced
to leave their land in 1948, are now candidates for “voluntary emigration”
to refugee camps in the West Bank. And all this is currently being passed
over in silence because maybe Sharon will disengage.
Tanya Reinhart is
Professor of Linguistics at Tel Aviv University. She is author of
Israel/Palestine: How to End the War of 1948 (Seven Stories
Press, 2002), one of the most important books on the Israel-Palestinian
conflict to date. Visit her website:
http://www.tau.ac.il/~reinhart.
A slightly different version of this article first appeared in
Yediot
Aharonot, April 13, 2005. Translated from Hebrew by Mark Marshall.
REFERENCES
[1] Here, e.g. are some reports from April last year: “The prime minister
took a commitment that the separation fence will be completed before
evacuation starts... Security echelons estimate that the fence can be
completed at the earliest towards the end of 2005. In other words: It is
possible that Israel will not be able to complete the evacuation at the date
that was promised to the U.S.” (Yosi Yehushua, Yediot Aharonot, April
19, 2004). “Netanyahu announced that he intends to support the
disengagement after the three conditions he posed were met …[including]
completion of the fence before the evacuation” (Itamar Eichner and Nehama
Duek, Yediot Aharonot, April 19, 2004).
[2] The figures are from the
ICJ advisory opinion of July 9. Similar figures were given in the
Israeli media, e.g. Meron Rappaport, Yediot Aharonot, May 23, 2003;
Akiva Eldar, Ha'aretz, February 16, 2004. The new line of the
barrier as approved by the Israeli cabinet in February 20, 2005 reduces the
size of Palestinian land to be annexed by the barrier by 2.5%, mainly in the
Southern Hebron area, where work is only starting (so the barrier route can
still change many times, as the work progresses). There were smaller
adjustments in other areas, dictated by decisions of the Israeli Supreme
Court, which means that some of the encircled villages should get some of
their land back. But this does not effect the total number of Palestinians
encircled by the wall. In Khirbet Jbara in the Tulkarm Governorate, the
cabinet approved moving a 6km section of the Barrier closer to the Green
Line. As a result, the Palestinian population in this area will no longer be
located in a completely closed area, but rather on the West Bank side of the
Barrier. This will reduce the overall Palestinian population completely
isolated from the West Bank by about 340 persons (according to UN OCHA
report of March 2005 on the preliminary analysis of the effects of the new
wall route approved in February 2005.
www.ochaopt.org).
Other Articles by Tanya Reinhart
*
The Israeli
Left is Opting for Suicide
* Sharon's
Gaza Pullout: Not Gonna Happen!
* From
Hague to Mas'ha
* Standing
Against the Claws of the Wall
* The
Address for Protest is Labor's Headquarters
* Biddu:
The Struggle Against the Wall
* What
Kind of State Deserves to Exist?
* As in
Tiananmen Square
* Sharon's
"Disengagement": A Pacifier for the Majority
*
The Complex Art of Simulation
*
The
Guaranteed Failure of the Road Map
*
Sophisticated Transfer
*
The Lilliputians Are No Longer Tiny People
*
The
Palestinians Don't Even Have Weather
*
Academic Boycott: In Support of Paris VI
*
The
Israeli Elections
*
A Vote for Mitzna is a Vote for Sharon
*
The Penal Colonies
*
The
Voiceless Majority
*
Why an
Academic Boycott
*
Jenin:
The Propaganda Battle
*
Evil Unleashed
*
Stop
Israel!
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