[zamanku] BBC NEWS: Challenge of Israeli settlements

2009-03-05 Terurut Topik Jusfiq Hadjar
 
Challenge of Israeli settlements  By Katya Adler 
 BBC News, Jerusalem 

Israel's Prime Minister designate, Benjamin Netanyahu, will not openly
commit to a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. But
the US insists it's the only way forward, and Hillary Clinton is
visiting the region for the first time as secretary of state.  
I feel like a stranger
in my own land. I can't go for a long walk. I have to sneak around.
Otherwise I'm stopped by Israeli soldiers or threatened by Israeli
settlers. 
“ This is no longer occupation, this is colonisation. Israel has no right to 
this land  ” 
Raja Shehadeh 
Raja Shehadeh is an award-winning author. A Palestinian mourning the
erosion and theft, as he sees it, of his birthplace, the West Bank. 
He took me to a stunning viewpoint over the rough, rolling
hills outside the Palestinian town of Ramallah. A nature-lover, Mr
Shehadeh pointed out the beautiful spring flowers all around us, as
well as the Jewish settlements. 
Every Palestinian town here is surrounded by these
settlements, he tells me. The hills here have been chopped and
flattened by them. They are an assault on one's sense of beauty and of
belonging in the land. 
More and more Israelis have moved to the West Bank and
East Jerusalem since 1967 when Israel captured and occupied the
territory. This is illegal under international law. Palestinians say it
makes peace here impossible. 
The only consistent policy Israeli governments have
had over the last 40 years is not seeking peace and building
settlements in the Palestinian territories, says Mr Shehadeh. 
This is no longer occupation, this is colonisation.
Israel has no right to this land. God is not in the business of real
estate. If Israel wants peace, it cannot be on this land. 
Hilltop fortresses  
So what is a Jewish settlement? The name can be rather misleading.
It might suggest something temporary, ad hoc maybe. But when you're in
them, or look at them from neighbouring Palestinian villages, you get
the impression they are being built to remain, at least for the
foreseeable future. 
Take Efrat, close to the Palestinian town of Bethlehem. Typically for a
settlement it's made up of rows of modern-looking white houses with red
roofs. 
Also typically it's built on a hilltop.  Settlers say
that's important for security reasons. Settlements tend to be
surrounded by a buffer zone - land Palestinians therefore can't farm. 
Settlements are also usually serviced by roads Palestinians aren't allowed to 
use. 
Many Jewish settlements are getting bigger. Nine thousand people live
in Efrat now. The community plans, if it can, to expand to 30,000. 
Already, the number of Jewish settlers living in the
West Bank and East Jerusalem - land Palestinians say is theirs and must
be part of their future state - is close to half a million . 
The Israeli human rights group Peace Now says Israel's
government has construction plans to double settler numbers in the West
Bank, an allegation the Israeli housing ministry denies. 
'Not about land'  
I was invited to visit a school in Efrat settlement. Pupils Ari Ehrlich, Matan 
Dansker and Yadin Gellman were born there. 
They are a couple of years away from serving in Israel's army where
they may well end up manning one of the many Israeli checkpoints
controlling Palestinian movement within the West Bank. 
Do they accept the international community's land-for-peace proposal?
Would they give up their homes for peace with the Palestinians? 
Clearly I don't want to leave my house, says Ari. But if there was a 
guarantee of peace, I'd go. The other two agree. 
But it's not about land anymore, insists Matan. Palestinians can
have land for peace. We've tried it before, like when Israel left Gaza.
It doesn't work. When you see what a Hamas leader wants, he's not
interested in Efrat, in my school or my house. His problem is me being
an Israeli. A Jew. It's not about land, it's about destroying us. 
Anyway, says Yadin, even if we move out of the
settlements. That won't be it. They'll ask for more. That won't be the
end of the story. 
The boys show me their school map, used in schools across Israel. The West Bank 
is not marked as a separate territory. 
Ari, Matan and Yadin say Israel still views the land as its own. Except for the 
Palestinian towns there. 
They tell me they all hope for peace in their lifetime. In the
meantime, they'll stay put in their houses and school. Buildings they
know international law deems illegal. 
Fragmented territory  
The proposed two state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
envisages a country called Palestine existing alongside Israel - but
many think the existence of Jewish settlements and their infrastructure
make a viable Palestinian state impossible. 
The three areas - Gaza, the West Bank and East
Jerusalem are separated, says Allegra Pacheco of the United Nations'
Humanitarian Office in the Palestinian Territories. 
Israel controls East Jerusalem and large parts of the
West Bank. 

[zamanku] BBC NEWS: Challenge of Israeli settlements

2009-03-04 Terurut Topik Jusfiq Hadjar
 
Challenge of Israeli settlements  By Katya Adler 
 BBC News, Jerusalem 

Israel's Prime Minister designate, Benjamin Netanyahu, will not openly
commit to a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. But
the US insists it's the only way forward, and Hillary Clinton is
visiting the region for the first time as secretary of state.  
I feel like a stranger
in my own land. I can't go for a long walk. I have to sneak around.
Otherwise I'm stopped by Israeli soldiers or threatened by Israeli
settlers. 
“ This is no longer occupation, this is colonisation. Israel has no right to 
this land  ” 
Raja Shehadeh 
Raja Shehadeh is an award-winning author. A Palestinian mourning the
erosion and theft, as he sees it, of his birthplace, the West Bank. 
He took me to a stunning viewpoint over the rough, rolling
hills outside the Palestinian town of Ramallah. A nature-lover, Mr
Shehadeh pointed out the beautiful spring flowers all around us, as
well as the Jewish settlements. 
Every Palestinian town here is surrounded by these
settlements, he tells me. The hills here have been chopped and
flattened by them. They are an assault on one's sense of beauty and of
belonging in the land. 
More and more Israelis have moved to the West Bank and
East Jerusalem since 1967 when Israel captured and occupied the
territory. This is illegal under international law. Palestinians say it
makes peace here impossible. 
The only consistent policy Israeli governments have
had over the last 40 years is not seeking peace and building
settlements in the Palestinian territories, says Mr Shehadeh. 
This is no longer occupation, this is colonisation.
Israel has no right to this land. God is not in the business of real
estate. If Israel wants peace, it cannot be on this land. 
Hilltop fortresses  
So what is a Jewish settlement? The name can be rather misleading.
It might suggest something temporary, ad hoc maybe. But when you're in
them, or look at them from neighbouring Palestinian villages, you get
the impression they are being built to remain, at least for the
foreseeable future. 
Take Efrat, close to the Palestinian town of Bethlehem. Typically for a
settlement it's made up of rows of modern-looking white houses with red
roofs. 
Also typically it's built on a hilltop.  Settlers say
that's important for security reasons. Settlements tend to be
surrounded by a buffer zone - land Palestinians therefore can't farm. 
Settlements are also usually serviced by roads Palestinians aren't allowed to 
use. 
Many Jewish settlements are getting bigger. Nine thousand people live
in Efrat now. The community plans, if it can, to expand to 30,000. 
Already, the number of Jewish settlers living in the
West Bank and East Jerusalem - land Palestinians say is theirs and must
be part of their future state - is close to half a million . 
The Israeli human rights group Peace Now says Israel's
government has construction plans to double settler numbers in the West
Bank, an allegation the Israeli housing ministry denies. 
'Not about land'  
I was invited to visit a school in Efrat settlement. Pupils Ari Ehrlich, Matan 
Dansker and Yadin Gellman were born there. 
They are a couple of years away from serving in Israel's army where
they may well end up manning one of the many Israeli checkpoints
controlling Palestinian movement within the West Bank. 
Do they accept the international community's land-for-peace proposal?
Would they give up their homes for peace with the Palestinians? 
Clearly I don't want to leave my house, says Ari. But if there was a 
guarantee of peace, I'd go. The other two agree. 
But it's not about land anymore, insists Matan. Palestinians can
have land for peace. We've tried it before, like when Israel left Gaza.
It doesn't work. When you see what a Hamas leader wants, he's not
interested in Efrat, in my school or my house. His problem is me being
an Israeli. A Jew. It's not about land, it's about destroying us. 
Anyway, says Yadin, even if we move out of the
settlements. That won't be it. They'll ask for more. That won't be the
end of the story. 
The boys show me their school map, used in schools across Israel. The West Bank 
is not marked as a separate territory. 
Ari, Matan and Yadin say Israel still views the land as its own. Except for the 
Palestinian towns there. 
They tell me they all hope for peace in their lifetime. In the
meantime, they'll stay put in their houses and school. Buildings they
know international law deems illegal. 
Fragmented territory  
The proposed two state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
envisages a country called Palestine existing alongside Israel - but
many think the existence of Jewish settlements and their infrastructure
make a viable Palestinian state impossible. 
The three areas - Gaza, the West Bank and East
Jerusalem are separated, says Allegra Pacheco of the United Nations'
Humanitarian Office in the Palestinian Territories. 
Israel controls East Jerusalem and large parts of the
West Bank.