palestine:

Report:
Israel plundering the Jordan Valley
Adri
Nieuwhof, The Electronic Intifada
September 8, 2007
Agrexco has become a target in international
campaigns for a boycott of Israeli goods aimed at
ending Israel's breach of international law and
human rights. For example the Palestine
Solidarity Campaign in the United Kingdom
protested in the warehouse of Carmel Agrexco in
Middlesex on 15 July 2007. Fruit and vegetable
exporter Agrexco is fifty-percent owned by the
Israeli state, and is responsible for the export
of 60-70 percent of all settlement produce,
including that from the Jordan Valley. The report
"To exist is to Resist, Eye on the Jordan
Valley" was recently published by MA'AN
Development Center and the Grassroots Palestinian
Anti-Apartheid Wall Campaign. The report offers
detailed information on the ongoing Israeli
colonization of the highly fertile lands of the
Jordan Valley. This article is based on the
report and focuses on the illegal Israeli
exploitation of the Jordan Valley.
Land grab at an unimaginable scale
The Palestinian Jordan Valley accounts for more
than a quarter of the total area of the West Bank
or about 2,400 square kilometers. Israel built
three settlements in the Jordan Valley in 1968,
and gradually increased the number of settlements
for agricultural, industrial, military or
religious purposes until the 1980s. Since the
early 1990s the settlements expanded from 11 to
36, housing more than 6,200 settlers. The
settlements occupy 1,200 square kilometers, or 50
percent of the Jordan Valley. Israel also
controls 1,065 square kilometers (44 percent) of
so-called closed zones like the border line,
military bases and natural reserves. About 50
square kilometers of the Jordan Valley (two
percent) are under combined Palestinian civil
control and Israeli security control. The
remaining 85 square kilometers in the area of
Jericho and al-Uja, only 3.5 percent of Jordan
Valley, fall under Palestinian control. Habitat
International Coalition paints an even more
sombre picture, where only 45 square kilometers,
or two percent of the Jordan Valley, will remain
for Palestinians. Furthermore, Ariel Sharon
announced in 2003 that the Jordan Valley will be
isolated from the West Bank by the construction
of a wall of 300 kilometers. Currently only
52,000 Palestinians live permanently in the
Jordan Valley, where the population once reached
up to 350,000.
In 2005 the Israeli ministry of agriculture
announced a two-year, 22 million USD program to
double the number of settlers in the Jordan
Valley by building new houses and the provision
of grants for agricultural development. Settlers
in the Jordan Valley enjoy privileges like free
housing, 70,000 square meters of land per
household, and a 20,000 US dollar long-term loan
when they settle in the Jordan Valley. Settlers
receive apart from this a 75 percent discount on
electricity, utility, communication and
transportation, and also free education, health
care and irrigation water. Settlers can get their
produce to the local markets within a few hours,
including the Palestinian markets, and they can
export to any country through Israeli companies
like Agrexco.
Contrast
In contrast, Palestinian land is confiscated for
instance for "security" purposes, or
because the land was not cultivated for three
consecutive years, even if it was closed by
military order. Palestinian buildings are
demolished when they are situated outside Jericho
and five other locations. Several Palestinian
communities still have no access to electricity
or utility. Communities in Israeli-controlled
areas lack schools and health centers because
building permits are refused. Palestinian farmers
cannot export their produce freely, nor can they
reach the local market easily because of the
military checkpoints and closures. Under normal
circumstances Palestinian farmers need three
hours to get to the West Bank markets. To build
packing houses close to their fields is not an
option, because Palestinians never receive
permission from the Israeli authorities to do so.
Since 2000 Israeli trucks have been prevented
from going to Palestinian fields to pick up their
trade. Instead, Palestinian farmers have to take
their produce to Bardala-Bisan checkpoint
crossing on the Green Line, where the load is
emptied into Israeli trucks and delivered to
Israeli markets. This led to an increase of
transportation costs, which is not reflected in
an increased price. The measures have led to a
dramatic drop in trade, and an increase in the
rate of unemployment to 21 percent in Jericho and
Tubas districts. As a consequence the majority of
the Palestinians in the Jordan Valley live under
the poverty line.
Violation of Palestinian water rights
The Jordan Valley is very fertile, because of its
access to water. Situated under the valley is the
Eastern Water Basin, but Israel has severely
limited the Palestinian use of water from this
basin and allows the Palestinians to use 58
million cubic meters per year (40 percent of what
is available). Besides, Palestinians are not
allowed to use water from the Jordan River, which
could provide 250 million cubic liters per year.
Since 1967 Israel as the occupying power has also
isolated 162 agricultural wells, prohibiting
Palestinians from using them. Israel also
controls where wells are allowed to be placed,
how deep they can drill and how much water can be
pumped. As a result of the measures the settlers
consume six times more water on their
agricultural lands than Palestinians.
Settlements agricultural production
flourishes
International humanitarian law prohibits Israel
from transferring parts of its civilian
population into the occupied Jordan Valley. The
International Court of Justice urged the
international community not to support
settlements. Taking the privileges of the Jewish
settlers in the Jordan Valley into account, it is
no miracle that agricultural activities in the
Jewish settlement are flourishing. The report
offers a long list of products originating from
the settlements in the Jordan Valley, mentioning
dates, grapes, citrus fruit, bananas, cherries,
melons, pomegranate, loquat, vegetables, onions,
tomatoes, egg plants, corn and oat, medical
herbs, spices, and flowers. Agrexco is one of the
companies that exports the products to Europe.
Buying agricultural products from the settlements
strengthens the Israeli economy at the cost of
the Palestinian people and makes the occupation
profitable.
- Download
full report [PDF]
Adri Nieuwhof is a consultant and human
rights advocate.
QUSIN:They punish
the village by stealing our children
September 24th, 2007
After reports of reprisals by IOF against
the peaceful inhabitants of Qusin, two
ISM activists visited the village today
to receive first hand accounts of the
harassment the villagers have received.
After a non-violent and successful
demonstration led by the people of Qusin
and supported by international activists,
the village has endured two nights of
arrests.
Starting on the evening of the 21st, not
one hour after internationals left the
village, it was invaded by three vehicles
of the IOF. They arrested two youths,
claiming they had been throwing rocks
during the terrifying occupation of
Al-Ayn refugee camp several days before.
Later that evening around 9pm they
returned arresting another three on
the same charge.
Two days later on Sunday 23rd, the IOF
again saw fit to harass the villagers of
Qusin taking youth from their beds at
around midnight. One father who refused
to let the soldiers take his son was
beaten. Three were arrested that night
bringing the total to eight.
This is collective punishment in action.
This is blatant repression of the
non-violent struggle. These children
marched alongside international Human
Rights Workers last Friday, they marched
with their families and compatriots. They
would've marched alongside Israelis if
the Israelis had not been blocked by the
army from coming. They marched also side
by side the Israeli army provoking them.
But
they were not provoked, they did not
respond. The demonstration was
non-violent, and successful, and this is
what has the IOF running scared.
Due to these outrageous actions from the
village, of rising up for justice
peacefully, the community must be
punished. How does the army do it? How
will they try to crush the movement? By
kidnapping children from their beds in
the middle of the night. At the moment
the future of these young men (all 18 or
under) is unsure. The recent Jewish
festival coupled with IOF's usual
unwillingness to help means no-one
is exactly sure where they are being held
captive, or for how long.
For information on the non-violent
demonstration in question click
here:
www.palsolidarity.org/main/2007/09/22/five-children-targetted-after-non-violent-demonstration/
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