Did you say the
Israelis are withdrawing?
Y. Khellef writing from Bethlehem, occupied
Palestine, Live from Palestine, 27 February 2005
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| Israeli watchtower at Qalandia checkpoint. |
Bethlehem, Feb, 20th 2005 — Since the Sharm El Sheikh summit
things have significantly improved in the Palestinian territories. The
Army has stopped its incursions in Palestinian towns, Palestinian
civilians are free to move, prisoners are about to be released and
economic activity is slowly recovering...
At least this is the information that most western media is conveying
to its people.
The situation on the ground is unfortunately completely different. The
Separation Wall is being completed faster than ever, all the military
check points are still in place, the Palestinian detainees are still
under Israeli custody and daily life is still hell for all
Palestinians.
The only significant gesture Israel has made towards the PA was the
handover of 15 corpses of Palestinian gunmen kept in Israeli morgues.
Nothing however has been done for the living. The Separation Wall or "Confinement
Wall" should we say, has already been completed around most of the
major Palestinian cities.
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| Qalandia checkpoint. |
Ramallah is technically sealed off, Qalqiliya is surrounded and
Bethlehem is almost completely cut off from the outside world. In this
latter, the occupation authorities have left the temporary check
point, and waited untill the end of the Christian holiday season (which
goes on till the end of January in the Orthodox calendar) to complete
the Wall. A major "border" terminal will be operational in few days
and the face of this holy Christian city will be irreversibly changed.
However it is true that daily life inside these enclaves (Bethlehem,
for instance, is reduced to a 35 km2 area) is generally
calm these days. Healthy, elderly people earning a decent pension can
live a fairly normal life. All the other sections of Palestinian
society continue to suffer daily insuperable difficulties which make
normal activities such as studying or earning a decent living "mission
impossible".
Students can hardly get to their universities unless they live nearby.
For example, a student from Bethlehem enrolled in the law school at
Al-Quds University in Abu Dis — only 20 km away and a 20 minute drive
— cannot get to class without passing through "Container", the major
Israeli checkpoint cutting West Bank in two, and there is no tangible
sign of this checkpoint being removed in the near future.
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| The Wall from Al-Quds University. |
Anyone travelling from the south of the West Bank, from Hebron or
Bethlehem to Ramallah or Nablus (note that it is almost impossible to
enter Nablus due to near hermetic closure of this major town) has to
go through this incredibly restrictive military checkpoint, which is
located at the entrance of As-Sawahra village near Jerusalem at the
top of a steep hill overlooking the Cedron Valley. Due to these
checkpoints, which restrict all movement inside the West Bank,
Palestinians are not only denied the basic human right of freedom of
movement but also those of studying and working.
It seems clear, from tangible facts and observations, and daily
travelling throughout the West Bank that these checkpoints are not
going to be removed until the "Wall" is completed, and then they will
be replaced by huge state of the art "terminals", making it almost
impossible for any Palestinian to get to East-Jerusalem.
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| The Wall in Abu Dis. |
According to Israeli sources, five such terminals are planned for the
West Bank. One has already been completed in Bethlehem and is mainly
intended for foreign tourists and pilgrims, and a second one will be
located east of the city in Al Nu'man for Palestinian citizens. This
"terminal" will allow some 250 trucks and 1,000 people (with special
permits issued by the Israeli authorities) to pass each hour.
Only then will the 61 permanent checkpoints (there are 10 of them
around Bethlehem alone), 48 road gates, and hundreds of earth mounds
be removed.