- Co-founded (with Meir Marglit) and directed by Jeff Halper,
the Israeli Committee Against Home Demolitions (ICAHD) "is a non-violent,
direct-action organization established in 1998 to resist Israeli demolition
of Palestinian houses in the Occupied Territories."
-
- ICAHD also helps rebuild homes. In addition, it resists
"land expropriation, settlement expansions, by-pass road construction,
policies of 'closure' and 'separation,' " as well as destruction of
agricultural land and crops. It also works for peace, equity, and ending
Israel's illegal occupation.
-
- Access its web site through the following link:
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- http://www.icahd.org/
-
- It estimates over 24,800 West Bank, East Jerusalem and
Gaza houses demolished since 1967 (4,247 during Cast Lead, according to
the UN).
-
- It classifies demolition types as:
-
- -- punishment for actions associated with the structures
(about 8.5%);
-
- -- administrative for lacking building permits (about
26%);
-
- -- land-clearing/military demolitions for any reason,
including achieving IDF goals or accompanying extrajudicial assassinations
(about 65.5%); and
-
- -- other undefined reasons.
-
- In fact, Israel's demolition and displacement policies
are serious international law breaches for any reason. Nonetheless, they
continue as official state policy to steal Palestinian land for Israelis,
an issue Western media ignore, as well as other Israeli crimes of war and
against humanity.
-
- On June 27, the Association for Civil Rights in Israel
(ACRI) said the Knesset Constitution, Law, and Justice Committee passed
a first draft of a law requiring Palestinians to pay house demolition costs
with no judicial review.
-
- ACRI and Bimkom: Planners for Planning Rights petitioned
the committee, calling the measure extreme, adding that without judicial
review "there is no option for the owners to demolish the structure
themselves," a much cheaper procedure.
-
- Moreover, this legislation gives administrative authorities
"unbalanced" demolition freedom, including to bulldoze homes
in "structurally disadvantaged communities such as Bedouins in unrecognized
communities" and Palestinians in East Jerusalem.
-
- A "softened version of the bill" lets courts
decide whether costs should be imposed and how much. It's expected to become
law.
-
- On July 21, a new UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs (OCHA) report documented alarming numbers of West Bank Area C demolitions
and forced displacements, saying more occurred (342) so far in 2011 than
in 2009 and 2010 combined.
-
- Based on field visits to 13 Area C communities, the report
said "restrictive policies and practices of the Israeli authorities,
including movement and access restrictions, settlement activity and restrictions
on Palestinian construction" force most Palestinians to leave.
-
- It added that thousands more are at risk because 3,000
demolition orders have been issued, including against 18 schools.
-
- On July 18, ICAHD reported "a new wave of demolition
orders, stop-building orders, property confiscations, settler harassment
and multiple warnings of imminent eviction(s) by the Israeli Civil Administration...."
-
- Most affected are Jerusalem periphery Bedouin communities,
"exhausted of alternative coping strategies." As a result, they're
appealing for international protection against demolitions, forced displacements
and relocations, what many of them have experienced before.
-
- Khan al Ahmar and Wadi Abu Hindi communities (near Maale
Adumim settlement) are especially targeted. Since May, all Wadi Abu Hindi
structures got stop-building orders. The community was also told that their
land was expropriated for the Separation Barrier.
-
- Khan al Ahmar got four new stop-building orders and notification
that final stop-work/demolition orders for 10 - 12 houses will be executed.
Moreover, Jahilin community residents fear they may be next.
-
- More Land Theft Planned
-
- On July 22, Haaretz writer Akiva Eldar headlined, "IDF
Civil Administration pushing for land takeover in West Bank," saying:
-
- According to an internal IDF document, new construction
is planned "not only around settlement blocs like Ariel, Ma'aleh Adumim
and Gush Etzion, but also in strategic areas like the Jordan Valley and
Dead Sea."
-
- Prepared by Lt. Col. Zvi Cohen, it says the custodian
of government property may take possession of undefined ownership lands,
including in the Jordan Valley and northern Dead Sea. Doing so, however,
will further cantonize Palestine, making it harder than ever to establish
an independent continuous territory state.
-
- In response, Rabbis for Human Rights said:
-
- "(A) politically motivated land policy must not
come at the expense of the rights of a population subjected to occupation,
which is excluded from the decision-making processes of those shaping its
destiny. The procedures empower the ability to use the mechanism Israel
set up for declaring 'state lands' for the purpose of dispossessing Palestinian
communities and individuals of their rights and lands."
-
- According to Dror Etkes, an activist monitoring settlement
construction, the IDF document reveals how political and military officials
work against Palestinians' interests. Nearly always, procedures for declaring
state lands benefit settlers alone.
-
- "That's the main way Israel enforces its discriminatory
land policy which aims to evict the Palestinians from most of the West
Bank and take possession of these territories."
-
- Moreover, Israel's Interior Ministry recently authorized
"the enlargement of 2,000 illegal homes" in East Jerusalem's
Ramat Shlomo neighborhood.
-
- And now this, according to Haaretz writer Jack Khoury.
On July 27, he headlined "Israel sues 34 Bedouin(s) for costs of repeated
demolitions of their homes," saying:
-
- The unprecedented suit seeks 1.8 million NIS (New Israeli
Shekels) in damages. About 3.4 NIS = one dollar.
-
- Despite Bedouins and other Palestinians building on their
own land, the Israel Land Administration (ILA) claims those charged built
homes in Al-Arakib, northeast of Be'er Sheva, "on what had been state
land since the time of Ottoman rule."
-
- It ended in 1918. Israel became a state in 1948. ILA's
claim is bogus, offensive and illegal, but it's not deterred from its longstanding
policy to steal as much Palestinian land as possible, destroying their
property and dispossessing them lawlessly.
-
- According to ILA:
-
- "The squatters against whom the suit was brought,
of the Abu Madigham and the Abu Jaber families, already have houses built
on land the state gave them in the area of Rahat." It said they keep
returning to disputed land, despite court orders prohibiting them from
doing so.
-
- Israeli audacity gives chutzpah new meaning, calling
Palestinian land "disputed," prohibiting them from living on
it, demolishing their property when they do, and now suing them for demolition
costs.
-
- ILA also claimed Bedouins use PR deception, accusing
Israel of repression when they're in breach of the law. It said the disputed
land was leased until 1998 for seasonal agricultural activities. However,
"defendants ousted the leasees and began squatting on the land."
-
- In 1999, state authorities acted to evict them. In March
2000, a permanent injunction barred them from the land, except to visit
a cemetery and mosque, the only structures there at the time. ILA said
suing is "an efficient way to deal with squatters and illegal construction."
-
- Al-Arakib village leader Sheikh Siyah Abu Madigham said
neither he or his family were told about the suit. In fact, he first heard
of it through the media, saying:
-
- "We also submit a lot of complaints but no one listens
to us, about all the buildings of ours that they destroyed - that the state
does not care. The first demolition cost us NIS 4 million. The trees that
were uprooted in the village cost us NIS 500,000. They destroyed the village
27 times. That cost us NIS 150,000 each time."
-
- Awad Abu-Frih, Al-Arakib activist against the demolition,
said residents expect Israel to compensate them for damages, not the other
way around, explaining:
-
- "The state is afraid of a precedent over Al-Arakib,
and so they talk to us in a language reserved for enemies who must be defeated,
so the hold over the land won't be an inspiration to other Bedouin(s) in
the Negev."
-
- He added that every time Israel destroys their village,
hundreds of Bedouins, Jews and foreign volunteers rebuild it.
-
- According to Thabet Abu Ras of the Adalah Legal Center
for Arab Minority Rights:
-
- "The state recognizes ownership rights over the
lands of Al-Arakib and is constantly offering (Bedouins) meager compensation
for the land. What's more, a law requiring the builder of a house to pay
for its demolition was not passed by the Knesset."
-
- Previously, Israel demanded Galilee and central Israel
Arab communities pay demolition costs, cases still being litigated. However,
they're against homes built on private, not state, land. The new suit is
the first time such a large number of Palestinians are affected. Indeed,
it gives chutzpah new meaning.
-
- Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
-
- Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and
listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive
Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central
time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are archived for easy
listening.
-
- http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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