The Environmental Impact of the Israeli Occupation by Jad Issac

14 March 2000 -- Part of the "Fertile Crescent," historic Palestine is
positioned at the crossroads between Eurasia and Africa. It hosts over
2,500 species of wild plants, 800 of which are rare, and some 140 of
which are limited to particular areas; at least 80 species of wild
mammals, and 380 species of birds are native to Palestine. This rich
biodiversity is supported by tremendous climatic variation within a
small area.
Unfortunately, it is now difficult to recognize the land that was
described by early visitors as "flowing with milk and honey." Barren
hills have replaced once-rolling woodland covered with thickets and
forests, and grasslands have turned into deserts. A fetid trickle of
sewage now runs where the Jordan River once flowed. The water level in
the Dead Sea is so low that it is now divided into two separate seas. In
short, the land is degraded, suffering from years of environmental
mismanagement and neglect that has only worsened during the past 33
years of Israeli occupation.

Jewish Settlements:
Since the June 1967 war, Israel has colonized the Occupied Territories
by building settlements in Gaza (housing 5,000-7,000 settlers) and in
the West Bank (housing 380,000 settlers, 190,000 of them in and around
East Jerusalem). The settlements are commonly positioned on hilltops
overlooking Palestinian communities, and the wastewater from many is
discharged into nearby valleys without treatment, polluting adjacent
Palestinian communities-among them Wadi Qana, Qatanna, Nahhalin,
Al-Khader, Al-Jania, Al-Walajeh, Dura, and Bani Na'im.

Moreover, solid waste generated in Israel is dumped without restriction
in the Occupied Territories. Solid waste from West Jerusalem, for
example, is transferred to the unsanitary West Bank dumping site at Abu
Dis, which overlays the infiltration area of the Eastern Aquifer.
Similarly, the Jewish settlements of Ariel, Innab, Homesh Alon Morieh,
Qarna Shamron, Kadumim, and many others dump their solid waste in the
West Bank, as do many military camps and communities located inside
Israel.

Relocation of Israeli Industries:
Israel has moved many of its polluting industries from Israel to the
Occupied Territories. For example, Geshuri Industries, a manufacturer of
pesticides and fertilizers originally located in Kfar Saba in Israel,
was closed down by Israeli court order in 1982 for pollution violations.
In 1987, it relocated to an area adjacent to Tulkarm inside the West
Bank, where its waste has damaged citrus trees, polluted the soil, and
possibly poisoned the groundwater. The Dixon industrial gas factory,
formerly located in Netanya inside Israel, has also moved into the same
area.

Industrial Waste:
The Israeli government has constructed at least seven industrial zones
in the West Bank. Located mainly on hilltops and occupying a total area
of approximately 746 acres, these industries produce industrial
wastewater and solid waste that often pollute adjacent Palestinian
lands.

Information about industries in the Israeli industrial zones-including
the amount and types of goods they produce, the labor they employ, and
the waste they generate-is not available to Palestinians. The wastewater
and solid waste these industries produce, however, provide important
clues about the type and extent of industrial activity. At least 200
factories are located in the West Bank, notably aluminum,
leather-tanning, textile-dyeing, battery, fiberglass, plastic, and other
chemical factories.

Clear evidence that Israeli factories operating in the Occupied
Territories do not follow pollution prevention measures is provided by
the Barqan industrial zone, which houses factories producing aluminum,
fiberglass, plastic, electroplating, and military items. Industrial
wastewater from this zone flows untreated to the nearby valley, damaging
agricultural land belonging to the Palestinian villages of Sarta, Kufr
Al-Deek, and Burqin, and polluting the groundwater with heavy metals. In
the central part of the Gaza Strip, the Israeli settlement of Kfar Darom
releases sewage and chemical waste from its industrial plants to the
Al-Saqa valley.

Illegal Movement of Hazardous Waste:
Despite the fact that Israel is a signatory of the 1992 Basel
Convention, which bans the illegal movement of hazardous waste, it
transfers such waste, generated inside Israel, to the West Bank. The
Palestinian Authority (PA) has discovered several violations:

In 1998, Israel illegally dumped several truckloads of toxic and
hazardous waste near the eastern border of the Tulkarm municipality and
near the residential area of the 'Azzoun municipality-50 meters from its
well for drinking water;

An Israeli company, Telbar, moved its medical waste disposal site from
Afulla inside Israel to a site close to the Jewish settlement of Yafit
in the Jordan valley;

A paint factory located in the Israeli settlement of Ganim has dumped
its hazardous and toxic wastes in the Palestinian village of Umm Al-Tut.

Moreover, according to a study published by The Center for Development
Work in Ramallah, Israeli companies are flooding the Palestinian market
with internationally banned pesticides. Their Israeli manufacturers are
also using Palestinian land to test new pesticides.

Military Areas, Bases, and "Nature Reserves":
Israel has declared 290,970 acres of the West Bank (20.2 percent of its
total area), mostly in the Jordan valley, as closed military areas, and
has created an additional 29 closed military areas in Gaza (420 acres).
Moreover, Israel maintains 71 military bases in the West Bank (totaling
some 9,563 acres).

Although most of these areas have low agricultural value, they
constitute the major grazing areas in the West Bank. Since Palestinian
pastoralists are denied access to these areas, the remaining grazing
areas suffer from severe overgrazing and are under threat of permanent
desertification.
Furthermore, the wildlife and rich biodiversity that characterize these
areas are harmed by the use of heavy military vehicles and tanks.

Israel has also created 48 West Bank "nature reserves" (covering 5.68
percent of the West Bank), mostly on the Eastern Slopes and in the
Jordan valley. Palestinians question the ecological value of these
reserves, which they view as another method used by Israel to deny
Palestinians access to their land.

Deforestation and Uprooting of Trees:
According to a recent study by the PA Ministry of Agriculture, the total
area in the West Bank and Gaza officially designated as forest land
decreased from 300,736 dunums in 1971 to 231,586 dunums in 1999 (one
dunum is 1,000 square meters). More than half of the affected areas are
in Gaza, where 95 percent of the forests have disappeared (from 42,000
dunums in 1971 to 2,000 dunums in 1999).

About 80 percent of this deforestation is attributable to the Israeli
occupation: to the establishment of military bases (two percent), to
settlements (78 percent), and to bypass roads (less than one percent).
Local Palestinians are responsible for deforesting 14 percent of the
land, while the remaining six percent is privately owned.

Moreover, the Israeli army and Jewish settlers have uprooted more than
half-a-million fruit trees, mainly olive trees, on privately owned land.
While the British Mandate government, and later the Jordanian
Administration, first implemented and later accelerated afforestation
programs in the West Bank and Gaza, all afforestation programs ended
with the Israeli occupation.

Desertification:
Approximately 2.18 million dunums (35 percent of the West Bank and Gaza
Strip) are natural grazing areas. Only 47 percent of the total grazing
area is accessible to Palestinian livestock owners, while the remainder
has been confiscated for Israeli settlements, nature reserves and closed
military areas. Overuse of the accessible areas has resulted in
progressive desertification.

Jad Issac is Director-General of the Applied Research Institute in
Jerusalem.
   
by courtesy & © 2001 Jad Isaac & Center for Policy Analysis on
Palestine

by the same author:
The Palestinian Water Crisis
 
Copyright © 2001 Media Monitors Network. All rights reserved.










_______________________________________________
CrashList website: http://website.lineone.net/~resource_base

Reply via email to