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WITNESS NO. 6 (ANONYMOUS)
The witness said that
his statement would relate to the
village of Amwas where he lived for 30 years.
This village is located 25 kms west of Jerusalem. Before
the events of 5 June 1967 the village had 800 houses, with
3,500 inhabitants, two mosques, one Carmelite convent under
the protection of the French government, and two schools. It
was equipped with two wells for drinking water and an
installation providing running water for 280 homes. Amwas
is an agricultural area with olive trees and fruit trees.
That village was destroyed in 1967, without any military
justification. The Arab Legion had withdrawn from the area
two hours before the arrival of the Israeli troops; none of the
inhabitants had any weapons and therefore there was no
military or armed resistance. Nevertheless, on 6,7 and 8 June
1967, after the occupation by the Israeli Army, one third of
the village was dynamited and all the houses were blown up.
Then on 24 June, the Israelis began to destroy two thirds of
the village by the use of bulldozers. Only two mosques, the
cemetery and the Carmelite convent were spared.
During all the events connected with the destruction,
which lasted about one month, the entire area was closed to
everyone except the Israeli Army. French priest Paul Gauthier
got the closest to the village and made a report, protesting
against what had happened, and addressed it to the Israeli
Army.
Returning to the ordeal suffered by the inhabitants, the
witness said that during the first day of war about 100 or 150
villagers from Amwas had taken refuge in the monastery. But
at the end of the fighting when they tried to return the Israeli
soldiers did not let them enter their houses. On 12 June, two
buses with Israeli armed soldiers arrived in the monastery and
the refugees were ordered to leave this monastery. They
refused but the Israelis came into the monastery and pushed
the refugees by force outside. They were then taken to the
village of Belt Sira. The witness pointed out that most of those
refugees were in night clothes and that they had nothing with
them, not even food or water. It was impossible to establish
any kind of contacts with them for almost two months. At the
beginning of July, the person in charge of the monastery met
in Ramallah with the chief of the district of Amwas and the
leaders of Amwas. They asked the Israeli authorities to allow
the refugees in Ramallah to return and reconstruct their village.
But that request was rejected.
The witness gave as a reference the book, A Lost Victory,
written by Amos Kenan, who was a head of the group that the
Israeli Army entrusted with the mission of destroying this
village. The book was published in Tel Aviv in 1970 by
Abraham Publications and it is a first-hand report of an
impartial witness. According to the witness, he heard from a
great number of people that during the destruction of the
village some elderly people who were not able to leave their
homes were killed under their houses when they were blown
up
After the war two thirds of the villagers moved to Amman
and one third remained in Ramallah, Jerusalem or in other
villages. Until now none of those villagers has been able to
return to that village to live or work. The Israeli authorities
transformed that village into a leisure park, planted trees and
called it Canada Park. Asphalt roads had been built in the
village and around it. The witness outlined that the only
remaining part of Amwas now was the Carmelite Convent,
which was located in the middle of the village and used to be
surrounded by many houses. He noted that if there had been
any battles, that convent would have been destroyed too, due
to its location. There was no battle and the village was
destroyed deliberately. All the lands of the village had been
seized and were now being exploited by the Israeli foundation.
Kerin Kiemet, and by the inhabitants of the nearby Israeli
settlements. All the area was irrigated by an irrigation network.
Two kilometres away from Amwas, the Mevo Khoron
settlement was founded.
WITNESS NO. 13 - MR. IBRAHIM MUSTAFA
EL-SHEIKH
The witness was a resident of the village of Amwas with
a population of 3,500 at the time of the occupation. On 6 June
1967, the Israeli troops entered the village with artillery, arms
and tanks. Four hours after the inhabitants were ordered via
loudspeakers to go to the house of the community leaders
(mukhtar) and then told to leave the village for Ramallah.
Only the very old people and the very young children
remained in the village; the rest, under the threat of being shot,
were forced to leave without being allowed to take any
belongings with them. After a two-day walk they reached
Ramallah. On 11 June they were told via loudspeakers to
return to their village. They walked back 32 kilometers and
as they approached the village, at adistance of two kilometres,
they saw the village being blown up. The witness stated that
all the houses and their contents had been blown out, with the
old people and the very young children that had been left
behind still inside. They were then told by Israeli officials to
go back to Ramallah as their village was now declared a
forbidden area for security purposes. In Ramallah, the villagers
pleaded with the Military Governor to allow them to
return to their village but in vain. The Abbot of the Latrun
Monastery tried to intervene on the villagers' behalf and
offered to the Military Governor to bear the expenses for
rebuilding the village, but was told that the matter was beyond
his competence, as the village had been blown up by special
order of Moshe Dayan. Mr. El-Sheikh recalled that in 1967,
Amwas village had 40,000 dunums of agricultural lands, 800
houses, a primary school for boys with 600 pupils, a special
primary school for girls with 400 pupils, special secondary
schools, two mosques, a post office, a network of drinking
water and 2,000 dunums of land planted with olive trees,
walnut trees and other fruit trees. After the occupation, the
village, where the Jews had now owned any property prior to
1967, was turned down by Israel into a park, which was called "Canada Park." The
whole area was called Nakhsoun, including the land which Israel had had since
1948 with the settlements of Nakhshoun on it.
WITNESS NO. 7 (ANONYMOUS)
The witness, who lived in Qalqilia on the frontiers of 1948,
said that most of the land in that area was in the hands of Jews
but the houses and the highest areas belonged to the Arabs.
The local people, being very active in the field of agriculture,
had succeeded in transforming the rocky land into a
prosperous and fruitful area, in particular, by digging some
50 artesian wells. This is a real motive why Israel had led
various attacks in that area before 1967, in particular on 10
October 1956 and 5 September 1965, when 1 1 artesian wells
were destroyed by Israel.
During the 1967 war, 60 per cent of the houses in the
village were destroyed and its inhabitants compelled to leave
for a period of 25 days. The villagers formed a committee that
carried out contacts with various consulates and finally, the
inhabitants managed to return to their village. Land of about
22 dunums which belonged to different owners had been
taken over by Israeli authorities and surrounded with barbed
wire.
Since then, in 1976, the Israeli authorities installed some
sort of equipment in the artesian wells to control and limit the
quantity of water which could be used. These water restrictions
forbade the villagers to make use of the rest of their
property and even compelled them to leve their land. The
witness said he had with him photocopies of the orders of the
Israeli Water Supply Authorities establishing strict limitations
for the use of water for each well during the current year.
Since farming was the villagers' only source of livelihood
they were in serious need of water.
Referring to the settlements, the witness said that on the
road between Nablus and Qalqilia the Israeli authorities established
two settlements at Kafr Lakef and Kafr Kaddum.
The first one was founded in 1976 in a wooded area and
bulldozers uprooted all the trees. The second settlement was
built on the land of villagers of Kafr Kaddum, which had been
levelled by bulldozers. Both settlements started with about 20
houses, now they have approximately 150 houses each and
are surrounded by barbed wire. The authorities built some
new roads and equipped an artesian well with a motor engine
and pipelines to supply two settlements with water.
Responding to various questions, the witness said that
only a few of the original owners had been paid for the houses
that had been destroyed. The amount paid for each house was
about one quarter of its real value.
WITNESS NO. 8 - MR. ALI DHIB OMEIRI,
MUKHTAR OF BEIT NUBA
Mr. Omeiri said that on 6 June 1967, Israeli authorities
occupied his village. On that day the people of the village
were asked to leave without being given any explanation.
After three days at the outskirts of the village, the inhabitants
of Beit Nuba were asked through loud speakers to return to
their homes and raise a white flag on the house. As the
inhabitants came close to their village, they were stopped by
military personnel and their homes were destroyed in front of
them. As Mukhtar of the village, the witness appealed to the
military commander of the area, who confirmed that the
people of the village could not return to their village, which
had been destroyed.
Describing the village of Beit Nuba, in the West Bank
Highlands, Mr. Omeieri stated that it was approximately
25,000 dunums in size and that the population amounted
approximately to 4,000 persons; it had two schools, and a
medical clinic. It was equipped with an artesian well and a
flour mill. He added that 650 houses had been blown up and
gave the names of 14 people who lost their lives in that
destruction.
WITNESS NO. 9 (ANONYMOUS)
After giving an historical background of Zionism and
explaining the various mechanisms utilized by Israeli
authorities to acquire the land of the Arabs, the witness talked
about his own experience with Israeli settlements. He said that
at the beginning of 1977 a project for a settlement started in
the Salfit area, located between the so-called green belt and
the Jordan River. The new settlement called Messha, 20 km
from Salfit, started with 20 prefabricated houses on land that
had been confiscated from the village Tefoa (between Nablus
and Jerusalem). In February 1978, Israeli authorities expropriated
another 500 dunums of land in the villages of
Salfit, Kofar El-Harish and Marda for a new settlement which
was built by the group, Gush Emunim, and with the approval
and help of the Committee on Settlements headed by the
Israeli Minister of Agriculture. It started with 80 families and
there are plans of settling 1,500 more families there within the
next 5 years. Protests led nowhere.
In April 1979 the local councils in the Salfit district were
informed of a new expropriation decision concerning 3,500 I
dunums between the settlements of Alyeh and Tefoa. The
occupying authorities took control of the only artesian well, I
which is located in the village of Zawiya, in order to supply
the above-mentioned two settlements with water, while the
local inhabitants of those villages were prevented from using
it. The witness said that he was a farmer and that Israel had
expropriated 80 dunums of his land, which was the main
source of living for his family. Regarding the expropriation
of land by Israeli authorities, the witness noted that in some
cases Israeli authorities offered as barter other lands which
belonged to families abroad whose properties had become
known as the land of absentee owners. However, the farmers
had rejected that offer on the grounds of its illegality and in
the knowledge that it would engender hatred among the Arabs
involved.
WITNESS NO. 17 (ANONYMOUS)
The witness stated that he was appearing before the Commission
to represent the municipality of Hebron, because the
military authorities had prevented the Mayor of Hebron from
leaving his city and coming to be a witness before the Commission.
The witness stated that he lived in Hebron in 1970
when the Israelis created the settlement of Kiryat Arba, one
of the largest settlements in the West Bank area.
In 1970, the occupying authorities and their troops encircled
an area of about 500 dunums of the municipality of
Hebron with barbed wire. When the citizens protested, Israeli
Defence Minister Moshe Dayan attended a public meeting
with them and the former Mayor of Hebron. He swore on his
honour that there would be only one camp established in the
area. A few days later the Governor of the West Bank issued
a military order expropriating 3,000 dunums of Hebron land
from the internal limits of the community.
In 1973, the Governor of the West Bank, together with the
Military Governor of Hebron, issued an order forbidding the
Arabs from building anything on their lands or houses within
the municipal boundary of Hebron. On 12 December 1978,
38 Arab inhabitants and the witness himself were summoned
to the military headquarters where they were informed that
their area had been declared as a closed-off area and that the
inhabitants could not leave it without previous permission
from the military authorities. The area concerned comprised
38 houses inhabited by more than 400 people. In addition to
closing off the area, the inhabitants were continuously subjected
to harassment by nearby settlers of Kiryat Arba. Soon
after that military order, the Mayor of Hebron received a letter
accompanied by a map showing a plan for the establishment
of 500 new houses to be built on land and properties belonging
to Arab inhabitants (the witness submitted a copy of that letter
and a map). Houses included in the plan were demolished to
make room for new homes.
Speaking of the ordeal of the people of Hebron, the witness
stated that children were forbidden from going to school and
that, by night, Jewish settlers from Kiryat Arba shone floodlights
and spotlights on windows of homes to frighten the
women and children. Those settlers were in military uniform;
they belonged to the Gush Emunim Group and were the same
settlers who killed the children in the demonstrations that
occurred at Halhoul.
The witness indicated that the inhabitants complained to
the United States Consul in Jerusalem, who promised them
that the Secretary of State of the United States would visit
their area. After the visit had taken place, the inhabitants
enjoyed some freedom of movement in and out of their area.
In another attempt to stop land expropriation, the witness
indicated that a case on behalf of the Municipality of Hebron
and in the name of 39 Arab landowners, was submitted to the
High Court of Justice, which by its decision had nullified the
expropriation of only 530 dunums, out of a total of 3,000
dunums which was the amount of land that had been expropriated
from its Arab owners in Hebron.
After the Court decision, Arab inhabitants, with the help
of 4,000 Jewish Israeli citizens - members of a group called
Israeli Peace Movement - tried to plant or replant the area
but were prevented by the military authorities.
In response to questions, the witness stated that the amount
of land expropriated by Israel from Arabs in Hebron was
3,000 dunums. The settlement of Kiryat Arba was established
on 500 dunums. Also 38 buildings were built on 530 dunums.
Four hundred and fifty persons lived there. The Israelis
uprooted the trees, which constituted the inhabitants' means
of livelihood and until the present have prevented Arab
inhabitants, in spite of Court decisions, from any building on
this land.
In response to another question about the incident that
took place in the village of Halhoul, in which two children
were killed by one of the settlers, the witness stated that at
that time the Military Governor of Hebron imposed a curfew
on the village of Halhoul for 15 days, forbidding anyone from
bringing anything to the village. In order to obtain food and
milk for the people, a matter which was refused by the
Military Governor, the witness said, they complained to the
Red Cross and also sent a cable to the United Nations
Secretary-General.
WITNESS NO. 14 (ANONYMOUS)
The witness gave an account of how the Israelis expropriated
about 1,000 dunums of agricultural land in his
village of Northern Assira, situated between Assira and
Nablus.
Two months before, he said, the Israelis had informed the
village mukhtar (community leader) that the land in question
was to be seized. They showed him a list in Hebrew of the
owners of that land and asked him to inform them that the
land was to become Israeli property. They told him that
anybody who wanted compensation should see the Military
Governor.
Naturally, said the witness, the owners were upset to hear
about the expropriation of their land, since it was their sole
means of livelihood, and decided that they would not yield
except under duress.
Two weeks later, the Israelis started building a road 10
metres wide and 4 kilometres long in an area covered with
wheat fields and almond and olive trees. As a result, the
owners sustained substantial losses.
Next, the Israelis divided the land into parcels of 50
dunums, installed telephone poles and brought prefabricated
houses.
WITNESS NO. 19 (ANONYMOUS)
The witness talked about an agricultural village, Anata,
located 2 kilometres north-east of Jerusalem. The village had
an area of 13,000 dunums with a population of 3,500 who
depended on agriculture for their livelihood. The area of the
village appeared in the district file of Tabu during both the
Ottoman and the British Mandate rules. It had also been
surveyed during Jordanian rule. The witness submitted to the
Commission a list of landowners in thevillage, each of whom
had his own separate file for property ownership.
In 1971 and 1972, the Israeli military authorities had
undertaken, without giving a reason to the villagers, a new
survey of the lands on the eastern side of the village, which
had continued until 1975. In January 1975, the Military
Governor of Ramallah had called in the witness to inform him
that the village had been divided into three zones: the western
part was linked to the municipality of Jerusalem; the northern
part to the municipality of Ramallah; and the southern part to
the municipality of Bethlehem. One of these zones with an
area of 4,650 dunums, which included 40 inhabited houses,
was marked as a military zone, access to which was completely
forbidden. Copies of the plan had been distributed to the
registration of Tabu and to the municipal administrations of
villagers and towns in order to forbid any selling of these lands
or other transactions on them and to stop issuance of building
and construction authorizations.
On 5 May 1977 the Military Governor had informed the
villagers that they would not be allowed to harvest their crops
in the closed-off areas. Access to these areas would be granted
by a special authorization from the military authorities only
andviolators would be taken to military court. On 19 September
1978, the Military Governor had met with the village
notables and had proposed to lease the land from the villagers
at the rate of 5 Jordanian dinars for each dunum in the first
category, 3 Jordanian dinars for each dunum in the second
category and 2 Jordanian dinars for each dunum in the third
category. That offer having been refused, the Military Governor
had proposed to pay compensation to the villagers according
to the report of the Committee of Agricultural Experts.
That proposal had also been rejected. Three thousand and five
hundred people were still living in the village of Anata. On 8
October 1978, the Israeli military authorities had summoned
the workers under military guard and had closed off the zone
with barbed wire and iron gates. On 14 October 1978, the
witness had requested the Jordanian Government to intervene
and raise the question of expropriation of their lands at the
international level. The Jordanian Government had raised the
question in the Security Council. On 25 October, the witness
had sent cables to the Secretary-General, the President of the
United States, the President of Egypt and the United States
Ambassador to Israel, requesting their intervention against
the expropriation of the village lands. On 14 November 1978,
the villagers had submitted their case to the Israeli High Court
of Justice, which on 10 Decmember 1978 had given a temporary
judgment forbidding the army to work on the land until
the Court had made a final judgment. On 15 December 1978,
General Shalam Tagner had submitted a statement to the High
court indicating that 1,740 dunums, not 4,650 dunums, were
needed as a military zone and had requested that the temporary
judgement be nullified. The High Court had not allowed
enough time for the villagers to respond to the new
situation and had met on 17 December 1978. On 15 January
1979, the Court had issued its judgement, agreeing to the
expropriation of 1,740 dunums of fertile agricultural land.
The villagers had not been informed of the decision until 18
March 1979, that is after the period of 30 days legally allowed
to appeal such a judgement. The witness submitted to the
Commission, among other relevant documentation, a list of
the landowners in the 1,740 dunums of land. Noting that he
himself was the owner of 1,200 dunums out of the 1,740
dunums of land, the witness stated that he had been left with
only 300 dunums without any possibility of access. On 11
April 1979, he had submitted a request to the Israeli
authorities for permission to reach his land, but there had been
no answer. He stated further that on 5 April 1979, the Israeli
army had started surveying the remaining lands in order to
establish an industrial zone thereon. The army, he continued,
was then building roads and organizing the new zone.
WITNESS NO. 20 (ANONYMOUS)
The witness said that, unlike other occupations in the past,
Israeli occupation had as its ultimate aim to take possession
of the land and drive its inhabitants away. An important new
facet of Israel's settlement policy, he said, was that unlike past
policy, which consisted of establishing settlements mostly
close to the green line which separated Israel from its pre-
1967 borders, the new trend was to divide the West Bank into
large squares, then criss-cross them withroads in all directions.
As perceived by the inhabitants, the aim of that policy
was to divide the main cities and towns by building settlements
on the corners of each square; thus "balkanizing" the
territory in such a way that it would not be a viable entity.
The witness also gave a number of incidents involving
mistreatment of Arab youngsters by some of the Jewish
settlers, especially in the area of Kiryat Arba.
In reply to various questions, the witness said that the new
trend which he described in his statement would result in the
loosening of trade and other ties between the towns and the
outlying villages because the settlers would start taking the
law into their own hands and set up check points wherever
they saw fit. Furthermore, the occupied West Bank being a
small territory, the land lost as a result of the building of wide
roads and streets would deprive several families of their
property.
The witness said that some check points were permanent,
especially at the entrance of Jerusalem and other major cities.
Waiting time at those check points could be as much as one
hour and 45 minutes.
All settlements, he also said, were of a permanent nature,
even when they started as temporary shelters. The population
in settlements ranged from 200 to 2,000. The only Arabs
allowed to enter them were poor labourers doing menial jobs.
As to the extent of the land taken so far by Israel, it
amounted to 36 per cent of the area of the occupied West
Bank. He believed that as a result of the road construction, the
percentage would soon reach 39 per cent.
WITNESS NO. 22 (ANONYMOUS)
Testimony submitted in writing stated that Silwad is a
town located 15 kilometres north of the city of Ramallah in
the West Bank. The witness added that Israeli practices
towards the landowners of Silwad were the following:
1. Land expropriation. After 1967, the Israeli occupation
authorities expropriated 1,650 dunums in the area called
Al-Thaher. This land was owned by individual farmers of
Silwad. They objected to this action to the Israeli Military
Governor, who offered to pay for the land, but the owners
refused to sell. A small local airport was built on it with a
military camp. The camp was transformed gradually after
1974 into a settlement for Israeli civilians;
2. The Israeli Settlement of Ofra. Before the 1967 war,
the Government of Jordan was in the process of using an area
of 300 dunums south-east of Silwad as a military camp. When
the 1967 war broke out, no compensation was paid to their
individual owners. In March 1974, an Israeli settlement was
established in this area called Ofra. The area was expanded to
include an additional land of 100 dunums. The owners objected
this action to the Governor but with no success;
3. Restricted area. A total of 5,000 dunums were fenced
and restricted by the Israeli occupation authorities. This area
belonged to individual owners of Silwad and the neighbouring
town Ein Yabroad.
The Security Council Commission concluded its report by stating the recent information about Jewish settlements and the impact of the settlements on the Arab population as follows:
RECENT INFORMATION ON THE SETTLEMENTS
According to the figures obtained, there are altogether in
the occupied territories 133 settlements, including the 17 in
and around Jerusalem, 62 in the West Bank, 29 in the Golan
Heights, and 25 in the Gaza Strip and the Sinai.
The population of those settlements varies in number,
probably depending on the policy purposes predetermined for
each settlement. In the area of Jerusalem and the West Bank
where the establishment of settlments has been the most
intensive, the number of settlers has reached approximately
90,000, while in the Sinai their number would be under 5,000.
The land seized by the Israeli authorities as a whole, either
specifically for the establishment of those settlements or for
other stated reasons, covers 27 per cent of the occupied West
Bank and the quasi-totality of the Golan Heights.
On the basis of the information received, the Commission
is convinced that a number of settlements were established on
privately owned land and not only on public land.
Many of those settlements are of a military nature, either
officially placed under the control of the Israeli army or de
facto with a settler population of military age. Moreover,
those settlers are said to have at their disposal military
weapons in the midst of an unarmed Arab population.
According to several witnesses, the location of the settlements
is determined in accordance with agricultural designs,
and also with what Israel considers to be "security" purposes.
That may explain, for instance, the existence of three successive
belts of settlements reported to have been established
between Jerusalem and the Jordan River and which would be
aimed at "compartmenting" the local population.
Supported by the strong influence of various private
groupings, the settlement policy is an official government
programme which is implemented by a number of organizations
and communities representing both the Government and
the private sector inside and outside Israel.
In addition to private contributions coming mostly from
outside Israel, the financing of the settlement policy is essentially
a governmental matter. In that connexion, the Commission
was told that the Israeli government has set aside the
equivalent of $US 200 million for expanding and establishing
settlements during the fiscal year 1979180.
The Commission found evidence that the Israeli Government
is engaged in a willful, systematic and large-scale
process of establishing settlements in the occupied territories
for which it should bear full responsibility.
CONSEQUENCES OF THE SETTLEMENT POLICY
ON THE LOCAL POPULATION
The Commission is of the view that a correlation exists
between the establishment of Israeli settlements and the displacement
of the Arab population. Thus it was reported that
since 1967, when that policy started, the Arab population has
been reduced by 32 per cent in Jerusalem and the West Bank.
As to the Golan Heights, the Syrian authorities stated that
134,000 inhabitants had beenexpelledleaving only 8,000, i.e.
6 per cent of the local population in the occupied Golan
Heights.
The Commission is convinced that in the implementation
of its policy of settlements, Israel has resorted to methods -
often coercive and sometimes more subtle - which included
the control of water resources, the seizure of private properties,
the destruction of houses and the banishment of persons,
and has shown disregard for basic human rights, including in
particular the right of the refugees to return to their homeland.
For the Arab inhabitants still living in those territories,
particularly in Jerusalem and the West Bank, they are subjected
to continuous pressure to emigrate in order to make
room for new settlers who, by contrast, are encouraged to
come to the area. The Commission was told also that in the
Golan Heights Israeli authorities imposed Israeli citizenship
on all new-born children in an effort to assimilate the remaining
population.
The settlement policy has brought drastic and adverse
changes to the economic and social pattern of the daily life of
the remaining Arab population. As a mere example of that
evolution, the Commission was informed that a number of
Arab landowners were now compelled to earn their living and
that of their family by working on their own land as the hired
employees of the Israeli settlers.
The Commission considers that the pattern of that settlement
policy, as a consequence, is causing profound and
irreversible changes of a geographical and demographic nature
in those territories, including Jerusalem.
The Commission has no doubt that those changes are of
such a profound nature that they constitute a violation of the
Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian
Persons in Time of War, of 12 August 1949, and of the
relevant decisions adopted by the United Nations in the
matter, more specifically: Security Council resolutions 237
(1967), 252 (1968) and 298 (1971); the consensus statement
by the President of the Council on 1 1 November 1976; as well
as General Assembly resolutions 2253 (ES-V), 32/5 and
331/13.
IMPACT OF THE SETTLEMENT POLICY AND ITS
CONSEQUENCES ON THE SEARCH FOR PEACE
While fully aware of the extreme complexities inherent in
the Middle East problem and at the same time recognizing the
limitations in the scope of its mandate, the Commission none
the less had the opportunity to note a genuine desire for peace
in the capitals it visited as well as among the leaders of the
Palestine Liberation Organization whom it met.
Unfortunately, the Commission has also perceived a deep
sense of despair and helplessness, primarily among the Palestinian
refugees. That stems from the realization that Israel's
policy with regard to the occupied Arab territories and more
particularly its policy of continuing to establish more settlements
is unabated and undaunted either by United Nations
decisions or any other external factor. The Commission
would like to state clearly in that regard that in the course of
its various meetings it felt that this settlement policy was
widely regarded as a most negative factor in the achievment
of peace in the area both by the refugees themselves and all
those who support their cause, including the neighbouring
Governments for which that policy generates at the national
level economic and social problems of grave consequences.
Consequently, after examining the situation relative to
settlements in the Arab territories occupied since 1967, including
Jerusalem, the Commission wishes to reaffirm the
determination made in resolution 446 (1979), according to
which "the policy and practices of Israel in establishing
settlements in the Palestinian and other Arab territories occupied
since 1967 have no legal validity and constitute a
serious obstruction to achieving a comprehensive, just and
lasting peace in the Middle East."
B. RECOMMENDATIONS
On the basis of the conclusion reached, the Commission
would like, therefore, to recommend that the Security Council,
bearing in mind the inalienable right of the Palestinians
to return to their homeland, launch a pressing appeal to the
Government and. people of Israel, drawing again their attention
to the disastrous consequences which the settlement
policy is bound to have on any attempt to reach a peaceful
solution in the Middle East.
In the view of the Commission, as afirst step, Israel should
be called upon to cease on an urgent basis the establishment,
construction and planning of settlements in the occupied
territories. The question of the existing settlements would
then have to be resolved.
The Security Council might further wish to consider
measures to safeguard the impartial protection of property
arbitrarily seized.
As to Jerusalem, the Security Council should also call
upon the Government of Israel to implement faithfully the
resolution it has adopted on that question as from 1967.
Moreover, recalling that Jerusalem is a most sacred place for
the three great monetheistic faiths throughout the world, i.e.,
Christian, Jewish and Moslem, the Council might wish to
consider steps to protect and preserve the unique spiritual and
religious dimension of the Holy Places in that city, taking into
account the views of high-ranking representatives of the three
religions.
In view of the magnitude of the problem of settlement and
its implication for peace in the region, the Security Council
should keep the situation under constant survey.
THE USURPATION OF PALESTINIAN LANDS AND THE ESTABLISHMENT OF JEWISH SETTLEMENTS IN THE WEST BANK AND THE GAZA STRIP 1980-1989
The following information about the usurpation of Palestinian lands and the establishment of Jewish settlements is collected from Jewish newspapers, Al Fajr (the Jerusalem Palestinian weekly), the research done by Dr. Meron Benvenisti, the Institute of Palestine Studies and the annual reports of the United Nations Special Committee to investigate Israeli practices affecting the human rights of the population of the occupied territories.(13 )
USURPATION OF PALESTINIAN
LANDS AND THE ESTABLISHMENT OF JEWISH SETTLEMENTS IN
1980
Zionist policy towards the occupied territories in 1980 was
shaped and executed against the backdrop of the Camp David
process. At the end of January, Israel was to withdraw from
strategic passes in the Sinai and formal diplomatic relations
with Egypt would immediately follow. There remained the
thorny question of the simultaneous negotiations on Palestinian "autonomy"
which had a deadline for resolution of May
26. On January 7, Israeli Prime Minister Begin flew to Aswan
to meet with Sadat, allegedly to clear the air over the Palestinian
issue so that normalization could.proceed on schedule.
However, the meeting was described as "heavy on sightseeing" with
little substance coming out of the talks. This characterized all other
American-Egyptian-Israeli discussions on the Palestinian question throughout
the remainder of the year.
Israeli conceptions of Palestinian "autonomy" were
presented to the Sadat regime in January in the form of a 26
page plan outlining an administrative structure to be imposed
on the Palestinian population in the West Bank and Gaza. The
plan was published in the Israeli press on January 19th with
a summary of the powers Israel would arrogate to itself.
For the Begin government the key to thwarting the possibility
of the eventual emergence of an independent Palestinian
state was the establishment of a proliferation of
settlements in the occupied territories. Settlement was to be
promoted regardless of whether or not individual colonies
were economically viable or whether there were sufficient
government finances to establish them in the first place. The
Begin government was so obsessed with the idea of alienating
Palestinians from their land, that it also offered virtual sponsorship
to the settlement schemes of fanatical independent
settler movements such as the Gush Emunim and Meir
Kahane's Kach. Renegade land expropriation and settlement
construction occurred in tandem with the more refined occupation
schemes of the World Zionist Organization and the
Ministry of Agriculture.
The World Zionist Organization settlement strategy was
outlined in a plan drawn up by the head of its Settlement
Department, Mattityahu Drobles:
"In light of the current negotiations on the future of Judea
and Samaria, it will now become necessary for us to conduct
a race against time .... It is therefore significant to stress today
mainly by means of actions, that the autonomy does not and
will not apply to the territories but only to the Arab population
thereof. This should mainly find expression by establishing
facts on the ground. Therefore, the state-owned lands and the
uncultivated barren lands in Judea and Samaria ought to be
seized right away, with the purpose of settling the areas
between and around the centres occupied by the minorities so
as to reduce to the minimum the danger of an additional Arab
state being established in these territories. Being cut off by
Jewish settlements the minority population will find it difficult
to form a territorial and political continuity. There
mustn't be even the shadow of a doubt about our intention to
keep the territories of Judea and Samaria for good ... The best
and most effective way of removing every shadow of a doubt
about our intention to hold on to Judea and Samaria forever
is by speeding up the settlement momentum in these territories." (14)
To kick off the massive settlement drive for 1980, the joint
Israeli government-World Zionist Organization settlement
committee announced a plan on December25,1979 to double
the Jewish population in the West Bank in the coming year
and a half. Some 20,000 people were to be newly settled in
the West Bank. However, there was no idea as to how to come
up with the funds for such a project. The settlement budget
for 1979 was IL 3 billion. The new plan called for an allocation
of funds of up to IL 10 billion ($ 285 million). Even
though there was no budget guarantee, an aide to Finance
Minister Yigael Hurvitz commented: "Billions don't frighten
anyone today."
At the beginning of 1980, the continued easy expropriation
of Palestinian land in the West Bank was temporarily
thrown into confusion by a successful court challenge by
Palestinians whose land had been seized by Gush Emunim
settlers for Eilon Moreh near Nablus. On October 22, 1979,
the Israeli High Court ruled that Eilon Moreh was not imperative
for military security and must be evacuated. The Gush
Emunim settlers still refused to evacuate the site as of January
1. The Begin cabinet supported the settlers' "illegal" occupation
by granting an evacuation extension of 5 weeks in
defiance of the High Court decision. Begin's determination
to flaunt even Zionism's own legal formalities to pursue the
settlement campaign provoked four unsuccessful no confidence
motions in the Knesset.
To demonstrate the determination not to lose a single
settlement, work commenced in December on a new site only
a few kilometres away from the original site of Eilon Moreh.
The evacuation delay sparked a stream of protests by Palestinians
whose land had been confiscated. Besides demonstrations
near Eilon Moreh, the landowners petitioned the High
Court, which issued a show cause order against the government
demanding why the site should not be evacuated immediately.
Finally, on January 29, the government began to
dismantle the settlement. Some remaining holdouts were
ejected by force on February 3 and transported to the new site
on Jabal al-Kabir.
Preparation of the new site cost the government over $1
million. In a Knesset ruckus, Moshe Dayan claimed that the
government was throwing away "millions and millions" on
Jabal al-Kabir. But Eilon Moreh was crucial to the Begin
government's single-minded drive towards expansion. No
expense would be spared. On January 30, the government
began clearing ground adjacent to the settlement site for an
"industrial zone." On the day of the ground clearing, the site
was visited by Agricultural Minister Ariel Sharon, who was
in charge of settlement programmes and an unofficial sponsor
of Gush Emunim. He stated what Eilon Moreh meant for the
Begin government: "It is absolutely clear a Jewish town will
rise near Nablus. Most of my efforts have been directed at
that. A town with thousands of Jews is perhaps the only
practical answer Israel has to prevent the possibility of a
second Palestinian state. Jordan is Palestine already."
The $1 million allocated for initial construction on Jabal
al-Kabir was only the opening shot in the campaign to maintain
this barren outpost inhabited by extremist Gush Emunim
settlers. It was disclosed in the Hebrew Press in March that
nineteen families had been given personal grants totalling
over $1 million by the World Zionist Organization just to stay
in the settlement. Only sixteen families were living in the
settlement at the time; three of them had not even made the
decision to move there when they received their money. This
amount of money did not include allocations to the settlement
by other government ministries. For nearby Palestinians, the
new site meant more land expropriations and a continuing
struggle against the new intruders. While the settler population
did not increase, the land seizure did. On July 9, the
Ministerial Defense Committee approved a new access road
to the settlement and forty hectares of land were expropriated
from Palestinians in a nearby village.
The Eilon Moreh episode led the fanatical Gush Emunim
settlement movement to establish new settlement sites to
force the government to escalate its settlement activities.
While the fate of Eilon Moreh was being decided in January,
Gush Emunim's main sponsor in the Begin Cabinet, Agriculture
Minister Ariel Sharon, prompted the cabinet to reaffirm
Gush Emunim's prerogative to establish the settlement of
Livona. Gush Emunim's settlement plans were a provocative
attempt to settle Jews in parts of the West Bank densely
populated by Palestinians. Eilon Moreh was to be a first
implantation adjacent to Nablus, while Livona was a "thickening*'
of the Gush Emunim settlement of Neve Tsuf near the
Arab villages of al-Lubban and Arad.
The escalation of a new settlement campaign touched off
by the Gush Emunim's seemingly renegade actions, did not
leave the supposedly "moderate" Labour Party untouched.
The Labour controlled Unified Kibbutz Movement held a
two-day meeting at the beginning of January to work out its
own settlement drive. A political communique issued afterwards
criticized the Begin government for financing Gush
Emunim settlement actions and said that Gush Emunim activity
in the West Bank was harmful to peace efforts. But the
key issue seemed to be that Labour settlements were not
obtaining enough money for themselves. The conference
announced that the Unified Kibbutz Movement would set up
thirteen new settlements of its own by 1983 -a target date
long after the time when the so-called "Palestinian autonomy"
was to be instituted in the West Bank under the terms of the
Camp David agreements. While the Israel High Court
decision on Eilon Moreh implied that West Bank settlements
might actually hinder Israeli military "security," Yigal Allon
stated at the conference that "it is very important for security
to have rural settlements along the state borders." He was
undoubtedly thinking of the Jordan Valley, where Labour
already had a string of settlements and wanted more government
money poured into new ones controlled by Labour.
At the same time, the Gush Emunim announced its own
plans for increasing the number of settlements in the West
Bank and Gaza before any kind of "Palestinian autonomy"
could ever be implemented. At a conference held at the
beginning of January, Gush Emunim instructed its member
settlements to form a new settler nuclei to "multiply" their
existing settlements. Each new nucleus would be responsible
for establishing one new settlement.
From the very beginning of its multiplication campaign,
Gush Emunim was assisted by the military occupation forces
and found in Sharon apowerful advocate in the Begin cabinet.
One of the main targets in the campaign was the extension of
Kiryat Arba near Hebron, which was ultimately to lead to a
generalized explosion of the whole conflict between the
Palestinian population and the encroaching occupation forces.
But the less dramatic examples of the Gush settlement
expansion attempts also demonstrated the close collaboration
with the Israeli military and Sharon.
After the announcement of the new campaign, Gush
Emunim settlers from Giveon decided to expand the settlement
by setting up a "guard post" one kilometre west of the
settlement. The site was to be the beginning of a new settlement
called Tal Hadasha. Although not officially approved
by the Ministerial Settlement Committee, a road was constructed
connecting Tal Hadasha to Givon and the new site
was actually inhabited by regular Israeli army troops. The
main aim of the extension was to stop Palestinian villagers
from the Neve Samuel area from cultivating their land nearby.
Within days after the land seizure, the Ministerial Settlement
Committee chaired by Sharon approved the Gush Emunim
seizures ex post facto.
With Gush Emunim leading the way, the scramble to
establish new settlements moved very quickly, and no Zionist
political faction wanted to be left out. The youth movement
of Begin's Herut Party established a new settlement called
Maale, overlooking the Palestinian village of Azun, on
January 23. At the endof January, Sharon announced government
plans to erect a series of new settlements around the
largest Palestinian city in the West Bank, Nablus. Gush
Emunim moved fifty more families into Karnei Shomron,
three kilometres west of Nablus during the first week of
February. Construction on the settlement of Efrat near Hebron
was slated to have begun the year before. Despite the grandiose
announcements of new settlement projects there was
increasing difficulty in finding new settlers. In the first week
of February, commencement of workonEfrat was announced
anew, and in this outpost, which was supposed to eventually
contain 5,000 housing units, it was now proclaimed that the
first settlers were to be two hundred American families.
The Gush Emunim settlement of Livona got another boost
from the government in the first week of February when a
decision was issued allowing settlers to seize 1,000 dunums
of land belonging to the Palestinian village of Abud for the
beginning of construction. The Gush settlers from Neve Tsuf
who had instigated the establishment of Livona also extracted
government permission to chop down a historic grove of trees
near the village of al-Nabi Salih to make way for theirpre-fab
homes.
On February 14, Sharon inaugurated the settlement of
Kame Shomron B near Qalqilya. With the normalization of
Egyptian-Israeli relations just concluded, the settlement campaign
was attracting unprecedented international condemnation.
Sharon justified the continuing Zionist expansion in the
West Bank with a new distorted logic. He stated at the
inauguration ceremony that the settlements were "the Zionist
response to the menace of establishment of a Palestinian state ...
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to part 3
By Issa Nakhleh Return to Table of Contents |