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compensation. If he has appropriated and sold such private or public property, it may afterward be claimed from the purchaser without payment of compensation.''
The wrongful act of deprivation may pass possession of the property while the ownership remains in the private owner. For this reason the property is bound to be restored to the rightful owner when it is identifiable and capable of restitution.
THE PRINCIPAL JUDICIAL AUTHORITIES IN THE TRIALS OF WAR CRIMINALS
The principal judicial authorities on offenses against property in the trial of war criminals after World War II are those treated in Volumes IX and X of the Law Reports of Trials of War Criminals which dealt with the trial of the accused Flick, the accused Farben and the accused Krupp, The main conclusions of these judicial authorities can be summarized as follows:
1. The infringement of the property rights of the inhabitants of the occupied territory was considered a war crime.
2. The Hague Convention regarding private property relates to plunder, confiscation and requisition which, in turn, imply action in relation to property committed against the will and without the consent of the owner.
3. The Tribunal stated in the Krupp trial, "Spoliation of private property, then, is forbidden under two aspects; firstly, the individual private owner of property must not be deprived of it; secondly, the economic substance of the belligerently occupied territory must not be taken over by the occupant or put to the service of his war effort."
4. In dealing with public property, the United States Military Tribunals have relied upon Article 55 of the Hague Regulations according to which the occupying power has only a right of usufruct over such property, and that only for the duration of the occupation:
"Article 55: The occupying State shall be regarded only as administrator and usufmctuary of public buildings, landed property, forests and agricultural undertakings belonging to the hostile State, and situated in the occupied country. It must safeguard the capital of such properties, and administer them in accordance with the rules of usufruct."
The Geneva Convention Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War of 12 August, 1949, made it illegal for the occupying power to transfer and settle its citizens in the occupied territory, The International Committee of the Red Cross commentary on the said convention states in its analysis of Article 49(6):
"It is intended to prevent a practice adopted during the Second World War by certain Powers, which transferred portions of their own population to occupied territory for political and racial reasons or in order, as they claimed, to colonize those territories. Such transfers worsened the economic situation of the native population and endangered their separate existence as a race."
During the trials of Nazi and Japanese war criminals the defendants contended that they were not bound by the international law regarding military occupations because the occupied territories had been annexed to Germany and Japan. The International Military Tribunals which tried these war criminals rejected this argument and held that the purported annexations were invalid and that the provisions of the International Conventions regarding enemy properties are applicable.
The Israelis are alleging that the establishment of Jewish Colonies in the West Bank and Gaza are not illegal because the Geneva Convention of 1949 does not apply to the West Bank and Gaza. On April 25, 1982, Menahem Begin stated on the National Broadcasting Company's program Meet the Press that: "You can annex foreign land. You cannot annex your own country. Judea and Samaria are part of the land of Israel, where the nation was born."
Yitzhak Shamir stated in January of 1982, as reported by The New York Times of January 25, 1982: "We want peace, but only on conditions that will enable us to continue our existence, and this means the Golan Heights, Judea and Samaria within the boundaries of the land of Israel."
Moshe Dayan was reported by the Hebrew newspaper, Ha-aretz, of April 4, 1969, to have stated the following: "We came to this country which was already populated by Arabs, and we are establishing a Hebrew, that is a Jewish state here. In considerable areas of the country (the total area was about 6 percent) we bought the lands from the Arabs. Jewish villages were built in the place of Arab villages. You do not even know the names of these Arab villages, and I do not blame you, because these geography books no longer exist: not only do the books not exist, the Arab villages are not there either .... There is not one place built in this country that did not have a former Arab population."
The claim of the Israeli government that the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 does not apply to the West Bank and Gaza was rejected by all resoIutions of the United Nations General Assembly which were usually approved by 140 states members of the United Nations and by the resolutions of the Security Council which were unanimously supported by the votes of the 15 members of the Council.
Even the United States, which is aiding and abetting Israel in the commission of this war crime of confiscation of Palestinians' properties, the establishment of Jewish settlements and the transfer of Jews to the West Bank and Gaza, stated on many occasions that the establishment of these Jewish settlements are inconsistent with international law and a violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949.
On July 28, 1977, President Carter stated: "This matter of settlements in the occupied territories has always been characterized by our Government, by me and my predecessors as an illegal action ..."
On October 19, 1977, Alfred L. Atherton, Assistant Secretary for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, testified before the Subcommittees on International Organizations, Europe and the Middle East, and the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives concerning Israeli settlements in occupied territories. Portions of the text of his prepared statement was as follows: "Second, we see the Israeli settlements as inconsistent with international law. The Fourth Geneva Convention Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War (dated August 12, 19491, which contains many of the internationally recognized rules under which military occupation should be conducted, states in article 49 the following: 'The Occupying Power shall not deport or transfer parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies.'"
Herbert J. Hansell, Legal Advisor of the Department of State in a letter dated April 21, 1978, written to Chairman Lee H. Hamilton, subcommittee on Europe and the Middle East of the United States House of Representatives, stated "the legal considerations underlying the United States view that the establishment of the Israeli civilian settlements in the territories occupied by Israel is inconsistent with international law."
On the basis of the available information, the civilian
settlements in the territories occupied by Israel do not appear
to be consistent with these limits on Israel's 'authority as
belligerent occupant in that they do not seem intended to be
of limited duration or established to provide orderly government
of the territories and, though some may serve incidental
security purposes, they do not appear to be required to meet
military needs during the occupation.
2. Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention Relative
to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, August
12, 1949,6 UST 35 16, provides, in paragraph 6:
"The Occupying Power shall not deport or transfer parts
of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies.''
Paragraph 6 appears to apply by its terms to any transfer
by an occupying power of parts of its civilian population,
whatever the objective and whether involuntary or voluntary.
It seems clearly to reach such involvements of the occupying
power as determining the location of settlements, making land
available and financing of settlements, as well as other kinds
of assistance and participation in their creation. And the
paragraph appears applicable whether or not harm is done by
aparticular transfer. The language and history of the provision
lead to the conclusion that transfers of a belligerent occupant's
civilian population into occupied territory are broadly
proscribed as beyond the scope of interim military administration.
The view has been advanced that a transfer is prohibited
under paragraph 6 only to the extent that it involves the
displacement of the local population. Although one respected
authority, Lauterpacht, evidently took this view, it is otherwise
unsupported in the literature, in the rules of international
law or in the language and negotiating history of the Convention,
and it clearly seems not correct. Displacement of
protected persons is dealt with separately in the Convention
and paragraph 6 would be redundant if limited to cases of
displacement. Another view of paragraph 6 is that it is directed
against mass population transfers such as occurred in World
War II for political, racial, or colonization ends; but there is
no apparent support or reason for limiting its application to
such cases.
The Israeli civilian settlements thus appear to constitute a
"transfer of parts of its own civilian population into the
territory it occupies" within the scope of paragraph 6.
4. It has been suggested that the principles of belligerent
occupation, including Article 49, paragraph 6, of the Fourth
Geneva Convention, may not apply in the West Bank and
Gaza because Jordan and Egypt were not the respective
legitimate sovereigns of these territories. However, those
principles appear applicable whether or not Jordan and Egypt
possessed legitimate sovereign rights in respect of those
territories. Protecting the reversionary interest of an ousted
sovereign is not their sole or essential purpose; the paramount
purposes are protecting the civilian population of an occupied
territory and reserving permanent territorial changes, if any,
until settlement of the conflict. The Fourth Geneva Convention,
to which Israel, Egypt and Jordan are parties, binds
signatories with respect to their territories and the territory of
other contracting parties, and "in all circumstances'' (Article
I), in "all cases" of armed conflict among them (Article 2)
and with respect to all persons who "in any manner whatsoever"
find themselves under the control of a party of which
they are not nationals (Article 4).
While Israel may undertake, in the occupied territories,
actions necessary to meet its military needs and to provide for
orderly government during the occupation, for the reasons
indicated above the establishment of the civilian settlements
in those territories is inconsistent with international law.
Israel, by means of tax-exempted, tax-deductible funds collected in the United States by the World Zionist Organization (the Jewish Agency), the United Jewish Appeal (the United Israel Appeal) and the Jewish National Fund, has established, during the years 1967- 1987, 130 Jewish settlements in the West Bank and Gaza and transferred more than 80,000 Jews to live in these Jewish settlements in the West Bank and Gaza.
Dr. Meron Benvenisti, a former deputy mayor of Jerusalem, made a study entitled, "Pilot Study Report," which was published in 1982 through the financial assistance of the Graduate School of the City University of New York and the International Center for Peace in the Middle East, Tel Aviv. Dr. Benvenisti states that the Israeli authorities issued a military order #783 which determined the boundaries of the Jewish settlements placing them under Israeli law as if they were an annexed part of the West Bank and Gaza. These Jewish settlements are not treated as parts of Israel. Dr. Benvenisti states that the lands confiscated by Israel amount to more than 55 percent of the entire area of the West Bank and Gaza. This figure has reached in 1987 sixty percent of the West Bank and Gaza. Dr. Benvenisti states further that the type of settlements built is more significant than the number of settlements. The emphasis now in enlarging the urban settlements which are suburbs of many Israeli cities. Housing in these suburban communities is being offered to Jews on such attractive terms and is drawing large numbers of young middle-income families to reside in these settlements. In an interview which was published in The Jerusalem Post International Edition, September 19-25, 1982, Dr. Benvenisti stated:
When President Reagan talks of '"freezing settlements" he displays an anachronistic approach to the problem. It is not the announcement or creation of eight more dots on the map but the increasing shift of Israel's urban population into areas which guarantees Israeli control over the West Bank and which creates perhaps an insurmountable political problem for any concession-oriented political party in the country.
CONCLUSION
The aforementioned facts confirm that Israel committed war crimes by confiscating millions of dunums of Palestinians' lands, by establishing 175 Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank and Gaza, by transferring about 86,000 Jews to live in these settlements, by formally annexing the city of Jerusalem, and by annexing the areas of the Jewish settlements and making them a part of Israel and subject to Israeli law. Therefore, Israeli leaders, together with members of the Jewish Agency, the Jewish National Fund and members of the United Israeli Appeal should be tried by a Palestinian Tribunal or by an international tribunal for war crimes. The members of successive American administrations since 1967 should be tried also as accomplices for these war crimes for granting the above groups a tax-exempt status which has enabled them to collect several billion dollars since 1967 and to use a great part of that those funds for the establishment of Jewish settlements.
The United States Administration is under a legal duty to cancel the tax-exempt status of these organizations and to stop aiding and abetting the Israeli government in the commission of these crimes. Article 146 of the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 states:
"The HIGH CONTRACTING PARTIES undertake to enact any Legislation necessary to provide effective penal sanctions for persons committing, or ordering to be committed, any of the grave breaches of the present convention defined in the following Article.
"Each HIGH CONTRACTING PARTY shall be under the obligation to search for persons alleged to have committed, or to have ordered to be committed, such grave breaches, and shall bring such persons? regardless of their nationality, before its own Courts. It may also, if it prefers, and in accordance with the provisions of its own legislation, hand such persons over for trial to another HIGH CONTRACTING PARTY concerned, provided such HIGH CONTRACTING PARTY has made out a prima facie case.'"
JEWISH SETTLEMENTS IN THE WEST BANK AND GAZA
A. AREA OF JERUSALEM AND ENVIRONS
Givat Hamivtar
1975Name |
Founded |
Location |
Land Confiscated (in dunums') |
Original Landowners |
Atrot |
1970 |
Jerusalem: north edge, near airport |
10,000 |
Arab residents of Beit Hanina village |
Neve Ya'acov |
1973 |
Jerusalem: north of town |
10,000 |
Arab residents of Beit Hanina village |
Ramot |
1973 |
Jerusalem: north-west, near Nabi Samwil |
30,000 |
Arab residents of Beit Iksa village; 100 Arab homes demolished |
Ramat Eshkol |
1968 |
Jerusalem: north side |
600 |
Arab land (expropriated) |
French Hill |
1969 |
Jerusalem: north side, along Jerusalem-Ramallah |
15,000 |
Arab land; land from Catholic convent |
Nahalat Defna |
- |
Jerusalem: north side |
270 |
Arab families and waqf properties |
Gilo Sharafat |
1973 |
Jerusalem: south side, near Beit Jala |
4,000 |
Palestinian residents of Jerusalem, Beit Jala, Beit Safafa and Sharafat |
East Talpiot |
1973 |
Jerusalem: east side, south of Jabal al-Mukabber where United Nations headquarters was situated |
20,000 |
Arab residents of Jerusalem, Sur Bahir, Sheikh Sa'ad and United Nations enclave expropriated |
Jewish Quarter (Old City of Jerusalem) |
Jerusalem: "Old City" between western wall of Al Aqsa Mosque and Latin Convent |
160 Arab houses demolished, 600 homes expropriated 6,500 Arab residents evacuated |
||
Hebrew University |
1969 |
Jerusalem: north side |
Expansion of pre- 1948 university for which land was expropriated |
|
Sanhedria extension |
1973 |
Jerusalem: north side |
Former demilitarized zone, entirely expropriated |
|
B. AREA OF RAMALLAH | ||||
Shiloh |
1976 |
East of Nablus- Ramallah road |
15,000 |
From villages of Turmus Ayya, Qarut, Abu-Elfalah and El-Maghireh |
80 to 90 |
Dunums closed off, almond trees cut down |
|||
Kochav Hashahar |
1975 |
North-east of Taiyyibe village |
4,000 |
Land from Deir Jarir and Kufur Malik; water from Ain Samia, Ramallah's sole water source |
Ofra (Ba'al Hatzor) |
1975 |
East of Ramallah on Jericho road |
350 |
100 dunums from Ain Yabrud village, 250 dunums from Silwad village |
Mevo Horon |
1969 |
Latrun salient |
16,000 |
Land from Yalu, Imwas and Beit Nuba villages, destroyed by Israel after 1967 war |
Beit Horon |
1977 |
Mid-way on Ramallah- Latrun road, near Tira |
- |
Initial take- over of Arab land |
Mevo Horon Dalet (Matityahu) |
1977 |
Latrun area; 3 krn from armistice line |
- |
DMZ (Midya Arab village prior to 1948) |
Kfar Ruth |
1977 |
Latrun area; 1 km south-east of Shayelet settlement |
- |
DMZ (site of Midya village), thousands of dunums of irrigated lands |
Givat Hamivtar HAMIVTAR | On north side of Jerusalem |
|
Land area entirely expropriated | |
Canada Park |
1976 |
Latrun salient: on Latrun-Ramallah road |
4,200 |
Land of destroyed villages of Yalu, Imwas and Beit Nuba (including 1,500 dunums of orchards) |
Ramonim |
1977 |
North-east of Taybeh and Rammun villages, north of Ramallah- Jericho road |
- |
Residents of Taybeh village (expropriated lands) |
Beit El |
1977 |
North of Ramallah- Nablus road |
35 |
Arab land. Settlement to Expand on 250 dunums of expropriated land |
Giv'on |
1977 |
North-west of Jerusalem; near El-Jib village |
- |
Previously Jordanian military base. 5,000 dunums was expropriated from El-Jib village |
Shayelet (Mevo Hori'im) |
1977 |
Latrun area |
- |
DMZ land (site of Arab village of Midya |
Neve Zuf (Nabi Saleh) |
1977 |
North-west of Ramallah; near Beir Nidham |
Closed off, including 100 dunums of wheat fields and almond trees of Nabi Saleh villagers |
|
C. JORDAN VALLEY AND OTHER AREAS |
||||
Mehola |
1968 |
Jordan valley: north end of West |
3,000 |
Residents of Bardala and Ain el-Beida villages. Water supply of villages depleted by wells of Mehola |
Argaman |
1968 |
Near end of Damya-Nablus road |
5,000 |
Arab agricultural land, including 1,000 dunums from Marj al-Naja |
New Massuah |
1976 |
Jordan valley: south of Nablus- Damya road |
800 |
Residents of Arab villages of Al-Ajajra and Jiftlik |
Massuah |
1970 |
Jordan valley: just south of settlement No. 28 |
3,000 |
Residents of Al- Aj ajra and Jiftlik villages, "expropriated land' |
Phatza'el B |
1977 |
South of settlement No. 29 |
1,500 |
Arab land |
Phatza'el |
1970 |
End of south-west road from Aqraba |
3,000 |
Residents of Fazayil village |
Tomer |
1976 |
Jordan valley: south of settle- ment No. 3 1 |
Unknown as construction still going on |
|
Gilgal |
1970 |
Jordan valley: south of settlement No. 32 |
3,300 |
Arab land; "plan to pump water from Jordan river" |
Netiv Hagdud |
1976/1977 |
South of Gilgal settlement (No. 33) |
Unknown as con- struction still going on |
|
Mivsom (Na'aran) |
1977 began construction |
Jordan valley: near Arab village of Awja |
- |
Land expropriated from residents of Awja village |
Yitav |
1970 |
West of Awja village |
2,000 |
Arab land from Awja village "including that of absentee owners,' water from Ain Al-Awja and two wells nearby |
Almog |
1977 |
Jordan valley: north-west of Dead Sea |
- |
Water supply drawn by 12- inch pipeline from well near Aqbat Jaber, Jericho refugee camp |
Kalia |
1968 |
Jordan valley: north-west of Dead Sea |
- |
Previously Jordan army camp; water supply from Wadi Keit west of Jericho |
Mitzpe Shalem |
1970 |
Dead Sea: west shore |
over 50 |
- |
D. Israeli settlements on the hills overlooking Jordan Valley |
||||
Name |
Founded |
Location |
Land Confiscated (in dunums') |
Original Landowners |
Malki Shua |
1976 |
North edge of West Bank: south of Mt. Gibboa; access road from Beit Shean |
- |
- |
Ro'i |
1974 |
"Limit of settlements" road (LS); north end |
2,500 |
Tubas village residents, land cultivated with wheat |
Bega'ot |
1972 |
LS road, north end: south of Ro'i (No. 41) |
5,000 |
Tumun village, land closed off |
Hamra |
1971 |
LS road: on east of West Nablus-Damya road, in lush valley. Farm land |
450 |
Land from Bab al-Nagab village, valley land near Darnya Bridge; 450 dunums of "absentee owner groves" |
Mekhora |
1973 |
LS road: south of Harnra (No. 43) |
4,000 |
From Bab al-Nagab, Beit Dajan and Beit Furik villages; water supply includes 1 well, 3 reservoirs |
Gitit |
Aug/1972 |
LS road: near east-west Aqraba valley road |
5,000 |
Land from Aqraba closed off, sprayed with defoliants early 1972 |
Ma’ale Ephraim |
LS road: on east- Ma'ale west Aqraba valley road Ephraim |
200 |
Arab land |
|
Nevo Shiloh (Givat Aduma) |
Nov/1976 |
South of Ma’ale Ephraim settlement (No. 46) |
1,300 |
Residents of Turrnus Ayya, Abu-Fallah and al-Mughayy ir villages |
Mishor Adomin (Ma'ale Adomin) |
Nov/1974 |
Dominates Jericho- Jerusalem road |
(81,000) |
70,000 dunums closed off Oct. 1972 by Israeli army; additional 700 dunums expropriated from villages of Abu dis, Umaryya and Issawy ya, 10,000 dunums from Silwad, 300 dunums from Silwad and Anota |
Mizpeh Jericho |
Early 1978 |
East of Mishor Adomin settlement (No. 48) overlooking Jericho |
- |
Land expropriated from above- mentioned villages |
Reihan (Nei'ami Bet) |
1977 |
North-west of Jenin, 3 km beyond armistice line |
Arab land |
|
Dotan (Sanur) |
Oct/1977 |
Along Nablus-Jenin road in Sanur valley |
Land of pre-1967 Jordanian police station near Sanur village |
|
Natal Ma'ale |
Jan/1978 |
East of Nablus-Jenin road |
550 |
Land confiscated from Silat Al-Khaha village including 25 olive trees Kufr Sur village |
Shomron |
Oct/1977 |
On Nablus-Jenin road |
1,680 |
|
Sal'it (Tsur Nathan Bet) |
Aug/1977 |
South-east of Tulkarm |
1,000 |
Kufr Sur village, half of land privately owned (cultivated), half common land for grazing |
Elon Moreh (Qaddum) |
Dec/1975 |
Near Nablus-Qalquilya road |
300 |
Arabs of Kufr Qaddum village |
Qamey- Shornron |
Oct/1977 |
South side of Nablus- |
150 |
Taken from villages of Jinsafut, Hajj and Kufr Laqif |
El Qana (Mes'ha Pe'erim) |
AprJ1977 |
Jinsafut village South-east of Qalqilya |
10 |
Site of former Jordanian police station |
300 |
From Mes’ha village |
|||
Tafuah |
Jan11978 |
Along Nablus-Ramallah |
150 |
Arab villagers of Yasuf |
(Bareget) |
road 13 krn south of Nablus |
|||
Haris |
Feb/1978 |
2 km west of Nablus- Ramallah road, near Salfit junction |
800 |
300 dunums expropriated for military camp; 500 dunums of pasturage closed off from villages of Kufr Haris, Harda and Falfit |
Har Gilo |
1976 |
In Beit Jala village area |
400 |
Grapevines and fruit trees expropriated from Beit Jala residents, June 1976 |
Efrat |
1978 |
On road south of Bethlehem |
7,000 |
Expropriated land, most of which cultivated |
Tekoah |
Jun/1975 |
South-east of Bethlehem near Hebron |
3,000 |
Land expropriated from Rafidya village |
Elazar |
Oct/1975 |
South of Bethlehem |
350 |
Vineyards expropriated from Hadar village, 1973 |
Rosh Tzurim |
Jul/1969 |
North of Hebron (Etzion bloc) |
3,000 |
Including site of pre-1948 settlement plus expropriated land from Nahalin village |
Alon Shvot |
Jul/1969 Settlers/1972 |
North of Hebron (Etzion bloc) |
1,200 |
Land expropriated in 1969 from arabs |
Kfar Etzion |
Sep/1967 first settlement on the West Bank |
North of Hebron (Etzion bloc) |
- |
Site (1943- 1948) of Jewish settlement and cultivated land (vineyards) |
Migdal Oz |
1977 |
West of Hebron (Etzion bloc) |
1,000 to 2,000 |
Residents of Beit Umar village, closed first as military area; 600 plum and almond trees uprooted in Dec. 1977 |
Kiryat Arba |
1970 |
Adjoins town of Hebron |
4,250 |
Individuals from Hebron and Halhoul (1,500 dunums expropriated) |
Yattir |
South of Hebron, near armistice line |
17,000 |
Pasture land planned to be fenced |
|
Zohar |
- |
- |
- |
- |
Sailat Dhahr |
1978 |
On Nablus-Jenin road |
550 |
Expropriated from Arab residents of Sailat Dhahr |
Anatot |
Late 1978 |
North of Jerusalem |
3,000 |
Expropriated from residents of Anata village |
Ya'afu Horom |
1978 |
Near Arab village of Yatta; west of Hebron |
- |
- |
Tretseh |
- |
- |
- |
- |
Jericho |
Approved 1978 |
Jericho area |
- |
- |
Zif |
1978 |
South of Hebron |
||
Neweimeh |
1979 |
Near Jericho |
||
New Kfar |
1979 |
On road between |
||
Etzion |
Bethlehem and Hebron |
|||
Huwara |
Few miles east of |
|||
Nablus |
||||
Tell Kebir |
1979: still under construction |
New location/village of Deir el-Hatab in the district of Nablus |
||
Qarney Shomron |
Mid-June 1979 |
On the main road between the towns of Nablus and Tulkarm, 3 kilometres west of the settlement of Qarney Shomron (a) |
||
Qarney Shomron (d) |
Sep/1979 |
South of the settlement of Qarney Shomron (a) |
||
Reihan |
Sep/1979 |
In the district of Jenin/third settlement |
||
Elazar |
Sep/1979 |
District of Kfar Etzion in the vicinity of another settlement, Elazar |
||
Yafit |
Second half of 1979 |
In the district of Jiftlik |
500 |
Confiscated land from Arab owners in the Jordan Valley |
Gebeiot Oz (b) |
Beginning of 1980 |
Between the villages of Shaikh, Iskandar and Kafr Salim in the district of Jenin |
||
Reihan (e) |
1980 |
East of the settlement of Reihan (b), in the district of Jenin |
||
Eidan |
Jul/1980 |
Middle part of Wadi Araba, south of the Dead Sea |
Government-owned land -previously sealed off |
|
El Qana (b) |
Jul/1980 |
East of the settlement of El Qana, west of Nablus |
111 |
Government- owned land -previously sealed off |
Qarney Shomron (h) |
Began construction Sep/1979 |
8 km. west of Qarney Shomron (a) |
||
Ma'ale Adomim |
1979 |
North-east of Jerusalem (El-Khan El- Ahmer) |
||
Ma'ale Adomim (c) |
1979 |
East Jerusalem |
400 |
Lands belonging to Jerusalem |
Mehola (b) |
1979 |
North of the Jordan Valley |
||
Nahal Maoz |
1979 |
North-east of Hebron in the district of Al-Yaghama |
||
Ariel (b) |
1979 |
In the district of Salfit, next to the settlement of Ariel (Haris) |
1,330 |
Villages of Mardeh and Sikaka |
Leona |
1980 |
On the Jerusalem- Nablus road |
Village of Al-Laban |
|
Beit El (b) |
1980 |
In the district of Ramallah |
Village of Beitein |
|
Efrat (town) |
Mid-October 1979 |
West Bethlehem, centrally located in relation to the Kfar Etzion |
1,300 |
Village of Al-Khudr |
Giv'a Hadasha |
Decision on its establishment mid-October 1979 |
In the vicinity on another settlement, Givon, district of Ramallah |
85 |
Confiscated land, belonging to the village of El-jib |
Matityahu |
1976 |
District of Ramallah |
600 |
Private land of inhabitants of the village of Naalein |
Giv'on (b) |
1977 |
Area of El-Jib, northwest of Jerusalem |
||
Elon Moreh |
June 1979 |
5 km south of Nablus |
1,300 |
Villages of Rujeeb and Aurta |
Neve Tzuf |
Sept 1979 |
Between the villages |
||
of Deir Bailout and |
||||
Aboud, north of Ramallah |
||||
Dotan |
1977 |
South of Jenin, near the village of Araba |
100 |
|
Ariel |
1977 |
500 |
Village of Kafr Haris (Salfit) |
|
El Qana |
1977 |
In the district of Abu-I-Qarnain on the Nablus road |
150 |
Two-thirds of area previously privately owned by Arab citizens |
Tafvah |
In the district of Jenin |
Village of Taffouha |
||
Israeli settlements in the Gaza Strip | ||||
Netzarim |
1972 |
4 km south of Gaza City: between north- south highway and coast |
700 |
Land expropriated from Abu Madyan Arab tribe early 197 1 |
Kfar Darom |
1970 |
South of Mughazi refugee camp, east side of north-south highway |
200 enlarged to 400 |
|
Netzer Hanzani |
1973 |
North of Khan Yunis |
300 |
State land |
Katif A |
1973 |
West of Netzer Hazard) settlement (No. 3) between Deir el-Baleh) and Khan Yunis |
||
Katif B |
1978 |
Close to Katif A Settlement |
1,000 |
|
Katif C |
1979 |
Close to Katif A and B |
||
Morag |
1972 |
On coast between Khan Yunis and Rafah |
12,000 |
Land expropriated from Umm Kalb village. El-Abadella and Khan Yunis early 1971 |
Eretz Azoor |
7969 |
North-east of Gaza City |
800 |
- |
Nahal Taadeel |
1972 |
Close to Gaza and Deir el-Balah next to El-Ogool |
4,000 |
State land |
Holeet |
1977 |
Close to Rafah |
300 housing units |
|
Beit Lahat (under construction) |
North Gaza |
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By Issa Nakhleh Return to Table of Contents |