nina mayorek march 2005

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Nina Mayorek March 2005

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Nina Mayorek March 2005. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Nina Mayorek March 2005

Nina MayorekMarch 2005

Page 2: Nina Mayorek March 2005

My name is Nina Mayorek. I live in Jerusalem. I am a peace activist and a member of Machsom Watch. MachsomWatch, which means Checkpoint-Watch, is an Israeli women's organization which carries out observations at military checkpoints located throughout the entire West Bank. We strive to de-escalate the frequently tense situations existing at the checkpoints between Israeli soldiers and Palestinians.

We report our observations on our website www.machsomwatch.org.

Every Saturday, my friends and I travel through the West Bank in order to find out what is going on there. In light of the great hopes evoked by Ariel Sharon’s Gaza disengagement plan and the Sharm al Sheikh summit of Abbas and Sharon, I would like to share my own

observations of what has been happening recently in the West Bank .

Therefore I shall take you on an imaginary tour through the occupied West Bank where we shall see 5 different places. We shall first go south from Jerusalem as far as Hebron, and then return to Jerusalem before going as far north as Nablus.

Page 3: Nina Mayorek March 2005

At-Tuwani

Abu Dis

Walaje

Let’s go to

the Occupied West Bank

1

2

3

4

5

Page 4: Nina Mayorek March 2005

Let us start from my home in Jerusalem. Soon we shall pass the Green Line – the only internationally recognized border of Israel. Today, very few Israelis know

(or care to recall ,)that when they pass the railway tracks near the Jerusalem Zoo they enter the Occupied Territories of the West Bank. The West Bank

has been occupied by Israel since the 1967 war .

What does it mean to enter “occupied” land? It means that we enter a territoryinhabited by two kinds of people. One group consists of 240,000 West Bank

Jewish settlers who have all possible rights and protection from Israelinational institutions. The other group is comprised of West Bank 2.4 million

Palestinians, stateless people, who are denied most basic human rights :to work, to study, to a free movement, to health care, to ownership of their

property .

Many implications for daily life ensue. For example, we cannot invite ourPalestinian friends to go with us. They cannot use the same roads .

There is a whole system of apartheid roads that the Israeli army calls "sterile roads," meaning sterile from Palestinians. On roads open to Palestinians

one frequently encounters “flying” )improvised( military checkpoints, wherePalestinians may be stuck for hours, and yet Israelis pass quickly.

Page 5: Nina Mayorek March 2005

West BankArabs- 2,400,000

Jewish settlers-240,000

Israel within the green lineJews- 5,200,000Arabs-1,300,000

Gaza StripArabs-1,400,000

Jewish settlers-7,500

Jerusalem beyond the green line*

Arabs- 250,000Jewish settlers-190,000

*Source: PASSIA

Page 6: Nina Mayorek March 2005

Our first stop is the Wallaje village, just south of Jerusalem. One cannot see happy faces here. Nearly every house is threatened with a demolition order from the Jerusalem municipality, and we see piles of rubble all around: these are the remains of houses that were already demolished .

The State of Israel decided to annex the Wallaje land, but without its inhabitants! The Wallaje villagers were declared illegal squatters in their own homes.

One may note that right now there are 2000 outstanding demolition orders on Palestinian homes in the Jerusalem area. Houses are beingdemolished under the pretext that they were built without permits

( i.e. “illegally .)”However, Israeli authorities give very few permitsto Palestinians for building homes, in very few places. Obtaininga building license is a protracted and costly process that the majority of the impoverished Palestinian society cannot afford .

Page 7: Nina Mayorek March 2005

House demolition in Walaje near Jerusalem

January 2005-photo EAPPI

Page 8: Nina Mayorek March 2005

Walaje village- A demolished house of a blind man (January 2005 photo: Nina Mayorek)

Page 9: Nina Mayorek March 2005

From Wallaje we continue south along the central road of the West Bank. We see Jewish settlements expanding in all

directions. For miles, we see the extensive permanentsettlements, which are absolutely illegal under international

law. Do not forget that these nice villas are for Jews only .Palestinians living in the West Bank can provide the

labor for building the settlements, but they cannot live in them .

Page 10: Nina Mayorek March 2005

Jewish “legal" settlement –

Efrata in the West Bank )January 2005-photo:Nina Mayorek(

Page 11: Nina Mayorek March 2005

Here we also see one of 105 outposts )which were proclaimedillegal by Israel and which prime minister Sharon promised President Bush he would evacuate long ago, but somehow the

evacuation is continually postponed, and recently we heardabout forthcoming "legalization" of outposts(. These outposts are built by Jewish settlers using the Wild West Method with a full support of the State of Israel )as described in the recent Sasson report presented to the Israeli government(. It works like

this: you like the place, and you do not care if the land is privatePalestinian property. You put caravans there and you build a road .

Very soon you replace the caravans with proper houses. You donot worry about security, knowing the army will provideit for you. You do not worry about acquiring building permits,infrastructure, water and electricity, because if you are Jewish ,

the Israeli Government will provide you with all of the above.You know your house will never be demolished.

Page 12: Nina Mayorek March 2005

A new outpost-beginning of a new settlement on the way to Hebron

(January 2005-photo by Nina Mayorek)

Page 13: Nina Mayorek March 2005

In the meantime, we arrive in Hebron, an ancient city, where On can visit Abraham's tomb – a worship site for both Muslims and Jews .

When we reach Abraham's tomb we see the empty streets of the old city. Most Palestinian families could not withstand any more violent attacks from Jewish settlers and months-long curfews imposed by the army, and left their homes. These Palestinians could not protect themselves, their property or their neighborhood. Just recently, the Israeli Government decided to build a new road to one of Jewish settlements in the city. The road will pass over the Muslim cemetery. There is no institution to which Palestinians can appeal for protection of their rights .

The Israeli policemen told Checkpoint Watch volunteers: when Palestinians call us we simply hang up the phone.

Page 14: Nina Mayorek March 2005

January 2005-photo Nina Mayorek

Palestinians were chased out and settlers are moving in

Page 15: Nina Mayorek March 2005

The third stop on our tour is the beautiful village of At-Tuwani,just a 15 minute drive south of Hebron )for those allowed to drive on the Israeli road, which excludes most Palestinians(. In this 500-year-old village, shepherds make their living from their sheep. However, it is their bad luck that Jewish settlers also

fancied the beautiful scenery and built the Ma’on settlement ona hill overlooking the village. Ma’on settlers have a very clearattitude towards their Palestinian neighbors: they want them out. The settlers are the lords of the land and the Israeli army

provides them with all possible military support. Palestiniansexperience different modes of harassment virtually daily .

Palestinian elementary school pupils on the their way to At-Tuwanischool have been one of the favorite targets - Ma’on settlers set

dogs on these children and throw stones at them. The schoolheadmaster has recorded many days on which the kids arrived

at the school seriously injured. But nobody dares to arrest theMa’on settlers: in the Israeli reality, these people are above thelaw. In fact, the Israeli government wants to expel all the villagersof at-Tuwani to a nearby town of Yatta, a designated destinationof South Hebron villagers dispossessed from their land.

Page 16: Nina Mayorek March 2005

Pupils of At-Tuwani (South Hebron Hills )are

frequently attacked by Maon settlers on the way

to their school(February-2005-photo: Nina Mayorek(

Page 17: Nina Mayorek March 2005

Let us now return to Jerusalem, where we can visit the Palestinianneighborhood of Abu Dis. There, an 8 meter concrete wall separates a Palestinian suburb of 60,000 people from Jerusalem by cutting across the main road. We can also see nearby a new )Jewish( settlement in the process of creation. Now it is only one house, but a new road is already being built to the area. Soldiers are stationed on the roof to provide security, and very soon Palestinian houses in the area will

be demolished because they “endanger the settlement" or for some other"security" reason .

Page 18: Nina Mayorek March 2005

Why checkpoints and walls are needed?

January 2005 photo Nina Mayorek

Wall in Abu Dis New settlement-Kidmat Zion

Page 19: Nina Mayorek March 2005

From here we continue north, again driving on the main West Bank road, road number 60.

We arrive at Nablus, home to approximately 130,000 inhabitants. Nablus serves as the commercial, industrial and services’ center for a rural population numbering hundreds of thousands. Over the last four and a half years the people of Nablus and its environs have seen more death and destruction at the hands of the Israeli military than the residents of any other locale in the West Bank. Countless invasions, incursions and aerial attacks left hundreds of civilians dead and the Old City severely damaged. Moreover, Nablus is effectively sealed off by a battery of checkpoints and roadblocks that surround it from all directions.

We stop at the Huwara checkpoint, at the southern entrance to the city. This is the military checkpoint that I visit with my Machsom Watch colleagues nearly every Saturday. Here we can see crowds of desperate people who need to reach

their workplaces, universities, schools, medical clinics or relatives. Do not imagine Huwarra as an easygoing place where every unarmed person can pass at his or her leisure. Oh no, there are countless reasons why one may not be allowed to pass. When I come there I often encounter the same people, usually students from the university in Nablus, who can waste 6 hours daily on their way to and from the university.

Page 20: Nina Mayorek March 2005

Huwarra checkpoint -southern entrance to Nablus )November 2004 photo: Nina Mayorek(

Page 21: Nina Mayorek March 2005

Huwarra checkpoint-southern entrance to Nablus*Students on their way to Al-Najah University January 2005 photo Nina Mayorek

*Comment, June 2005: Meanwhile, the southern half of this checkpoint was closed, whilethe northern one is still “well and alive”. So people are harassed “only” on the way from Nablus

to surrounding villages, but not on the way to Nablus. In the Israeli government parlancethis is called “goodwill gestures towards Palestinians.”

Page 22: Nina Mayorek March 2005

Israeli military and state officials tell us that the above measures -all of which constitute severe violations of international law –

were deemed necessary in the course of Israel's war against terrorism .

This is the place to emphasize that I personally, like all members of Machsom Watch, strongly condemn Palestinian terrorist attacks against Israeli civilians and believe that such criminal acts cannot be justified on any grounds, including the disparity of military power between the Israeli army and the Palestinian resistance groups. Israel's right to protect its citizens, however ,

should be exercised only along and from within its internationally recognized borders, that is, the Green Line. By waging a war of

destruction against the entire civilian population of the occupied Palestinian territories Israel is only breeding terrorism not eliminating it .

Page 23: Nina Mayorek March 2005

Nablus is also surrounded by military checkpoints because it is surrounded by Jewish settlements: Itamar, Izhar, Alon

Moreh, Har Braha and others. Settlers definitely need protection .They are strongly disliked by the Palestinian population and with good reason. The State of Israel expropriated Palestinian land on behalf of the settlers. There were many cases when settlers shot Palestinians without being punished by the Israeli justice system .

The settlers rob and destroy olive trees, which used to provide livelihood for Palestinian villagers. Because of these reasons the settlers are hated and need protection. And they get it. The Israeli army conducts a colonization war on Palestinians to protect

settlers' interests. The colonization enterprise leads directly to Palestinian terror .

Page 24: Nina Mayorek March 2005

White areas with blue trianglesJewish settlements with surrounding

annexed areas and access roads

The West Bank

The obstacle to peace

145-permanent settlements with 240,000 settlers

105-outposts with 1000 settlers

Page 25: Nina Mayorek March 2005

Returning from the Occupation Tour of the West Bank, I conclude that there is no basis for optimism yet. While Abbas and Sharonmay have shaken hands at Sharm al Sheikh, the situation on the ground has not yet improved.

The chief obstacle to peace between Israelis and Palestinians arethe West Bank settlements: 145 permanent settlements and 105 outposts, all of which are illegal according to international law.It is important to add that the settlement enterprise continues now ,

in these days, at an accelerated rate. Settlements preempt thepossibility of a " two state solution." They prevent the establishment of a viable and contiguous Palestinian state and could perpetuate the Israeli-Palestinian conflict forever.

I would like to ask the American public to exert its influence on the U.S. administration, the Senate and the Congress to put a stop to the Israeli government's policy of colonization and supremacy. This policy destroys all chances for reconciliation and peace for both nations .