dinsdag 24 april 2012

De Nuance van de NRC 193


Naar aanleiding van het feit dat de zionistische regering in Israel doorgaat met het stelen van Palestijns land beweert de NRC-correspondente  Leonie van Nierop het volgende:

'De internationale gemeenschap tilt zwaar aan de nederzettingen omdat ze een levensvatbare Palestijnse staat welhaast onmogelijk maken. Hoewel de nederzettingen maar 3 procent van het grondoppervlak beslaan, verhinderen ze voor Palestijnen toegang tot 43 procent van de Westelijke Jordaanoever. Bovendien laat de Israëlische premier zien dat hij zich weinig aantrekt van internationale eisen en afspraken. Hij laat zijn bondgenoten in Washington en Brussel behoorlijk in hun hemd staan.'


De werkelijkheid is dat de westerse bondgenoten gewoon doorgaan met het diplomatiek, economisch, politiek, cultureel en zelfs militair steunen van de 'Joodse staat.' Zo oefenen de Israelische strijdkrachten regelmatig met de NAVO-troepen. Bovendien wordt het EU-Associatieverdrag met Israel telkens weer opgewaardeerd waardoor de 'Joodse staat' steeds meer beloond wordt voor de schendingen van het internationaal recht en de mensenrechten, terwijl toch in artikel 2 van dat verdrag staat staat dat het is 'based on respect for human rights and democratic principles' die als 'essential elements' worden aangeduid.


Dankzij dat Associatieverdrag  is de Europese Unie de grootste afzetmarkt van Israel. In het Associatieverdrag staat dat beide partijen de mensenrechten dienen te respecteren, anders wordt het verdrag opgeschort. Maar over deze praktijken zwijgt de NRC-correspondente.


En wat betreft die percentages van 3 en 43 procent van Van Nierop, ook die geven een verkeerd beeld, zoals u uit het volgende onderzoek van Joods-Israelische vredeactivisten van B'Tselem kunt opmaken: 'Israel has taken control of 77.5 percent of the land and has prevented Palestinians from building on or using the land or remaining there...  Twelve percent of the area has been allocated for settlements, including the entire northern shore of the Dead Sea. '


http://www.nrc.nl/nieuws/2012/04/24/israel-legaliseert-drie-buitenposten-op-westelijke-jordaanoever-bondgenoten-in-het-hemd-gezet/?utm_campaign=nieuwsbrief&utm_source=email


Het gaat hier om het meest vruchtbare deel van de Westbank, waar het fruit en de groenten worden geoogst die via slinkse routes illegaal de Westeuropese markten bereiken. 


Bovendien: 'What is left at the moment is a mere 12% of the original Palestinian territory, broken up into a gerrymandered arrangement of non-contiguous cantonments.'

Met andere woorden: die drie procent van Van Nierop is onjuist. Om het in het juiste perspectief te plaatsen dient men te weten dat in 1947 de Palestijnen volgens het VN-Verdelingsplan 47 procent van het voormalige Palestina kreeg toegewezen. In 1948 bezette Israël ongeveer 78 procent van het land, met andere woorden, meer dan de helft van het Palestijnse land was door de zionistische troepen in beslag genomen. Van de overgebleven 22 procent is nu naar schatting ongeveer 12 procent over, ongeveer een kwart van wat de Palestijnse bevolking van de wereldgemeenschap had gekregen. Dat geeft toch een heel ander beeld dan de 3 procent waarover de NRC-correspondente rept, want dat zou betekenen dat de Palestijnen 19 procent van hun land in bezit zouden hebben. 

'Publications

Dispossession and Exploitation: Israel's Policy in the Jordan Valley and Northern Dead Sea

May 2011, Comprehensive report
The Jordan Valley and the northern Dead Sea area contains the largest land reserves in the West Bank. The area covers 1.6 million dunams, which constitute 28.8 percent of the West Bank. Sixty-five thousand Palestinians, live in 29 communities, and an estimated additional 15,000 Palestinians reside in dozens of small Beduin communities. Some 9,400 settlers live in the 37 settlements (including seven outposts) in the area.
Israel has instituted in this area a regime that intensively exploits its resources, to an extent greater than elsewhere in the West Bank, and which demonstrates its intention: de facto annexation of the Jordan Valley and the northern Dead Sea area to the State of Israel.
Taking control of land
Greenhouses of settlements next to ‘Ein al-Bida, in the Jordan Valley. Photo: Eyal Hareuveni, B'Tselem, 23 March 2011.

Israel has used various means to take control of most of the land in the area, as follows:
Thousands of dunams were taken from Palestinian refugees and used to build the first settlements there, beginning in 1968 and extending throughout the 1970s. This, in violation of a military order.
By legal manipulation, Israel has enlarged the inventory of “state land” in the area, such that 53.4 percent of the area, four times greater than pre-1967, is now deemed state land.
Israel has declared 45.7 percent of the area military firing zones, although they are situated next to main traffic arteries, alongside settlements’ built-up areas and farmland, or include land of settlements that is under cultivation. 
Israel has closed some 20 percent of the land by declaring them nature reserves, although only a small section of them has been developed and made suitable for visitors. Two-thirds of the nature reserves areas are also areas of military firing zones. 
Israel has seized lands in the northern Jordan Valley for the Separation Barrier and has placed 64 landmine fields near the route of the Jordan River. The army itself contends the landmines are no longer required for security purposes. 
Using these means, Israel has taken control of 77.5 percent of the land and has prevented Palestinians from building on or using the land or remaining there. Twelve percent of the area has been allocated for settlements, including the entire northern shore of the Dead Sea. Israel’s policy has cut up the Palestinian spatial sphere and isolated Palestinian communities in the area. In the last two years, the Civil Administration has repeatedly demolished structures in the area’s Beduin communities, although some of them were established before 1967. 

Taking control of water sources
Left: Ein al-'Uja spring in better days.. Photo: Itamar Grinberg, August 2004. Right: The dry 'Ein Uja spring today. Photo: Eyal Hareuveni, B'Tselem, 23 March 2011
Left: Ein al-'Uja spring in better days.. Photo: Itamar Grinberg, August 2004. Right: The dry 'Ein Uja spring today. Photo: Eyal Hareuveni, B'Tselem, 23 March 2011

Israel has taken control of most of the water sources in the area and has earmarked them for the almost exclusive use of the settlers.
Most Israeli water drillings in the West Bank – 28 of the 42 drillings – are located in the Jordan Valley. These drillings provide Israel with some 32 million m3 a year, most of which is allocated to the settlements. The annual allocation of water to the area’s 9,400 settlers from the drillings, the Jordan River, treated wastewater, and artificial water reservoirs is 45 million m3. The water allocated to the settlements has enabled them to develop intensive-farming methods and to work the land year round, with most of the produce being exported. The water allocation to the settlements is almost one-third the quantity of water that is accessible to the 2.5 million Palestinians living in the West Bank. 
Israel’s control of the water sources in the area has caused some Palestinian wells drying up and has led to a drop in the quantity of water that can be produced from other wells and from springs. In comparison, in 2008, Palestinians pumped 31 million m3, which is 44 percent less than Palestinians produced in the area prior to the Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement of 1995. Due to the water shortage, Palestinians were forced to neglect farmland that had been in cultivation and switch to growing less profitable crops. In the Jericho governorate, the amount of land used for agriculture is the lowest among the Palestinian governorates in the West Bank – 4.7 percent compared to an average of 25 percent in the other governorates. 
Israel’s control of most of the land area also prevents equal distribution of water resources to the Palestinian communities in the area; it also prevents the movement of water to Palestinian communities outside the area. Water consumption in Beduin communities is equivalent to the quantity that the UN has set as the minimal quantity needed to survive in humanitarian-disaster areas.

Restrictions on movement
 May 2011, Comprehensive report  The Jordan Valley and the northern Dead Sea area contains the largest land reserves in the West Bank. The area covers 1.6 million dunams, which constitute 28.8 percent of the West Bank. Sixty-five thousand Palestinians, live in 29 communities, and an estimated additional 15,000 Palestinians reside in dozens of small Beduin communities. Some 9,400 settlers live in the 37 settlements (including seven outposts) in the area.  Israel has instituted in this area a regime that intensively exploits its resources, to an extent greater than elsewhere in the West Bank, and which demonstrates its intention: de facto annexation of the Jordan Valley and the northern Dead Sea area to the State of Israel.  Taking control of land   Greenhouses of settlements next to ‘Ein al-Bida, in the Jordan Valley. Photo: Eyal Hareuveni, B'Tselem, 23 March 2011.  Israel has used various means to take control of most of the land in the area, as follows:  Thousands of dunams were taken from Palestinian refugees and used to build the first settlements there, beginning in 1968 and extending throughout the 1970s. This, in violation of a military order.  By legal manipulation, Israel has enlarged the inventory of “state land” in the area, such that 53.4 percent of the area, four times greater than pre-1967, is now deemed state land.  Israel has declared 45.7 percent of the area military firing zones, although they are situated next to main traffic arteries, alongside settlements’ built-up areas and farmland, or include land of settlements that is under cultivation.   Israel has closed some 20 percent of the land by declaring them nature reserves, although only a small section of them has been developed and made suitable for visitors. Two-thirds of the nature reserves areas are also areas of military firing zones.   Israel has seized lands in the northern Jordan Valley for the Separation Barrier and has placed 64 landmine fields near the route of the Jordan River. The army itself contends the landmines are no longer required for security purposes.   Using these means, Israel has taken control of 77.5 percent of the land and has prevented Palestinians from building on or using the land or remaining there. Twelve percent of the area has been allocated for settlements, including the entire northern shore of the Dead Sea. Israel’s policy has cut up the Palestinian spatial sphere and isolated Palestinian communities in the area. In the last two years, the Civil Administration has repeatedly demolished structures in the area’s Beduin communities, although some of them were established before 1967.      Taking control of water sources   Left: Ein al-'Uja spring in better days.. Photo: Itamar Grinberg, August 2004. Right: The dry 'Ein Uja spring today. Photo: Eyal Hareuveni, B'Tselem, 23 March 2011  Israel has taken control of most of the water sources in the area and has earmarked them for the almost exclusive use of the settlers.  Most Israeli water drillings in the West Bank – 28 of the 42 drillings – are located in the Jordan Valley. These drillings provide Israel with some 32 million m3 a year, most of which is allocated to the settlements. The annual allocation of water to the area’s 9,400 settlers from the drillings, the Jordan River, treated wastewater, and artificial water reservoirs is 45 million m3. The water allocated to the settlements has enabled them to develop intensive-farming methods and to work the land year round, with most of the produce being exported. The water allocation to the settlements is almost one-third the quantity of water that is accessible to the 2.5 million Palestinians living in the West Bank.   Israel’s control of the water sources in the area has caused some Palestinian wells drying up and has led to a drop in the quantity of water that can be produced from other wells and from springs. In comparison, in 2008, Palestinians pumped 31 million m3, which is 44 percent less than Palestinians produced in the area prior to the Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement of 1995. Due to the water shortage, Palestinians were forced to neglect farmland that had been in cultivation and switch to growing less profitable crops. In the Jericho governorate, the amount of land used for agriculture is the lowest among the Palestinian governorates in the West Bank – 4.7 percent compared to an average of 25 percent in the other governorates.   Israel’s control of most of the land area also prevents equal distribution of water resources to the Palestinian communities in the area; it also prevents the movement of water to Palestinian communities outside the area. Water consumption in Beduin communities is equivalent to the quantity that the UN has set as the minimal quantity needed to survive in humanitarian-disaster areas.     Restrictions on movement  Tayasir Checkpoint, in the Jordan Valley. Photo: Keren Manor, 26 December 2010, Activestills.org.
Tayasir Checkpoint, in the Jordan Valley. Photo: Keren Manor, 26 December 2010, Activestills.org.

In the framework of the easing of restrictions on movement in the West Bank that was carried out in 2009, Israel did not eliminate the movement restrictions in the Jordan Valley, despite the security calm in the area. Israel still operates four checkpoints in the Jordan Valley – Tayasir, Hamra, Ma’ale Efrayim, and Yitav. At these checkpoints, only Palestinian-owned vehicles that Israel recognizes as belonging to residents of the area are allowed to pass. 
The restrictions on movement seriously impair Palestinian life, since most of the educational facilities and medical clinics that are supposed to serve the local residents are situated outside the area.

Restrictions on building
Huts demolished by the Civil Administration in al-Farsiya, in the Jordan Valley. Photo: Atef Abu a-Rub, B'Tselem, 19 July 2010.
Huts demolished by the Civil Administration in al-Farsiya, in the Jordan Valley. Photo: Atef Abu a-Rub, B'Tselem, 19 July 2010.

Israel’s planning policy in the Jordan Valley makes it impossible for Palestinians to build and develop their communities. The Civil Administration has prepared plans for only a tiny fraction of the Palestinian communities. Furthermore, these plans are nothing more than demarcation plans, which do not allocate land for new construction and development. For example, the plan for al-Jiftlik, the largest community in Area C (the area that is under complete Israeli control), left 40 percent of the built-up area of the village outside its borders; as a result, the houses of many families are in danger of demolition. The plan for al-Jiftlik is smaller in land area than the plan issued for the Maskiyyot settlement, although al-Jiftlik has 26 times as many residents.

Taking control of tourist sites
Israeli bathing beach Bianqini, on the northern Dead Sea. Photo: Keren Manor, 13 March 2011, Activestills.org.
Israeli bathing beach Bianqini, on the northern Dead Sea. Photo: Keren Manor, 13 March 2011, Activestills.org. 

Israel has taken control of most of the prominent tourist sites in the area – the northern shore of the Dead Sea, Wadi Qelt, the Qumran caves, the springs of the ‘Ein Fashkha reserve, and the Qasr Alyahud site (where John the Baptist baptized Jesus). Israeli entities administer these sites. Israel also limits tourist access to Jericho, channeling tourists to the southern entrance to the city. As a result, few tourists visiting Jericho city spend the night there, resulting in heavy losses for the tourist industry in the city.

Exploitation of natural resources  
Production room at AHAVA, which produces cosmetics based on the Dead Sea’s high-mineral-content mud.  Photo: Keren Manor, 13 March 2011, Activestills.org.
Production room at AHAVA, which produces cosmetics based on the Dead Sea’s high-mineral-content mud.  Photo: Keren Manor, 13 March 2011, Activestills.org. 

Israel enables entrepreneurs in Israel to exploit the area’s resources. The Ahava cosmetics firm, in Kibbutz Mizpe Shalem, produces products from the high-mineral-content mud of the northern Dead Sea. An Israeli quarry next to the settlement Kokhav Hashahar produces building materials. Also, Israel has established facilities in the Jordan Valley for treating wastewater and for burying waste from Israel and from settlements. 
International law prohibits the establishment of settlements in occupied territory and exploitation of the resources of occupied territory. B'Tselem calls on Israel to evacuate the settlements, to enable Palestinian access to all the lands that have been closed to them, and to allow them to use the water sources for their purposes. In addition, Israel must remove the restrictions on movement in the area and enable construction and development in the Palestinian communities. Israel must also close down the enterprises that profit from the minerals and other natural resources in the area, and it must also shut down the facilities for disposal of Israeli waste.' 

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