Bethlehem to be encircled in steel as 'security fence' snakes its way around holy city
By Justin Huggler in Bethlehem
20 December 2003 


"We're not celebrating Christmas this year," says Yaqub Kasis, a member of Bethlehem's 
dwindling community of Palestinian Christians.

It should be a time of celebration for the city where Christ was born. Unlike last 
year, this Christmas there are no Israeli soldiers in Bethlehem's streets and the 
tanks have gone. "This Christmas is quieter than before," Mr Kasis says. "But it's 
worse. It's worse because of the wall."

Israel's "security fence" has arrived in Bethlehem. It snakes through the suburbs, 
close to the old stone houses. But the term "fence" is misleading. The section built 
in Bethlehem is made up of a triple layer concrete wall and two metal fences, one 
equipped with electronic sensors. The space between the two fences is patrolled by 
Israeli army jeeps. Israel is building hundreds of miles of fence across the West 
Bank. The pilgrims who travelto Bethlehem for Christmas this year will find that the 
city of Christ's birth is being walled off. Fears are growing that the city may soon 
be surrounded. The Israeli army says that the wall will not encircle the city - one 
quarter will remain open to the West Bank, it says.

But the Palestinian group Arij, which monitors Israeli construction in the West Bank, 
claims that the Israelis are planning to close the last quarter with two bypass roads. 
One road has already been completed near the north-eastern edge of the city and is cut 
off by its own protective fence. The Israelis say the new roads will be open to 
Palestinians, but Dr Jad Isaac, the head of Arij, says that even if they are, they 
will separate Bethlehem from its farmland and prevent expansion. "They are turning 
Bethlehem into a ghetto," he says.

It is a fate which has already befallen the Palestinian cities of Qalqilya and 
Tulkarem further north in the West Bank. Qalqilya is surrounded by a concrete wall 
complete with pillboxes from which Israeli soldiers look down on the city. The only 
way in and out is through Israeli army checkpoints.

Israel says the wall will stop suicide bombers crossing from the West Bank into 
Israel. "If that were true, why don't they build it on the Green Line?" says Dr Isaac. 
The Israeli government refuses to build the fence on the Green Line, the 
internationally recognised border between the West Bank and Israel. Instead, it cuts 
many miles into the West Bank, so that Jewish settlements can be included on the 
"Israeli" side.

International observers, including President George Bush's National Security Adviser, 
Condoleezza Rice, claim that Israel is attempting to establish a new de facto border. 
Last week, the Israeli Deputy Prime Minister, Ehud Olmert, said he wanted Israel to 
withdraw unilaterally from part of the West Bank and set its own borders. In an 
ultimatum to the Palestinians on Thursday, Ariel Sharon, the Israeli Prime Minister, 
warned he would embark on a "unilateral separation" plan within months if the 
Palestinians failed to arrest the gunmen and the suicide bombers as part of a 
negotiated peace. "If you look at the map you can see what Olmert is saying," says Dr 
Isaac. "They are saying that a Palestinian state will be limited to 40 per cent of the 
West Bank and Gaza Strip, crammed into separate cantons."

Palestinians who live outside the planned route of the fence face an uncertain future. 
Where the fence has been completed, the Israeli army has ordered that only 
Palestinians with permits can live between the fence and the Green Line. These permits 
will be issued at the discretion of the Israeli army. But the order exempts not only 
Israeli citizens but anyone of Jewish origin.

The situation is just as bleak for those inside the fence. The Israeli army wants to 
demolish Mr Kasis's home in Beit Sahour, a suburb of Bethlehem with a large Christian 
population, to make way for the fence. "If they demolish it, I will live on the 
rubble," says Mr Kasis. "I have nowhere else to take my children." Mr Kasis used to 
work in Israel, but since the Israeli military closures that have been imposed during 
the intifada, he has been unemployed. Mr Kasis lives on land that was given free for 
new housing by the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem. He invested his savings 
in the cooperative that built his home. The fence will increase Bethlehem's economic 
problems. Workers will no longer be able to cross illegally into Israel in search of 
jobs.

Those living near the fence will not be the only ones to suffer, Dr Isaac said. The 
land either side of the proposed route was set aside for the city's future 
development. If Bethlehem is completely enclosed, he says, the population will become 
increasingly crammed in as it continues togrow. Bethlehem could come to resemble the 
already fenced Gaza Strip, where the cities cannot expand and the population density 
is 4,500 people per square kilometre - one of the world's most crowded places.

The fence has accelerated another of Bethlehem's problems: the Palestinians are 
leaving. Many feel that their future in the city is stark and are applying for visas 
for America or Europe. Mr Kasis has two relatives who have already left. Several of 
his friends have left too. It seems everyone in Beit Sahour knows someone who has 
left. They say as many as 1,000 families have left Beit Sahour since the intifada 
began in September 2000.

George Ibrahim, a Christian who is preparing to leave for Sweden, said: "I don't want 
to leave. I don't support leaving. I am doing it in spite of myself. When I look at my 
children, I think, 'I don't have the right to make them suffer this life'."

It is easier for Palestinian Christians to get visas and work permits than Muslims. 
Many have relatives in Europe and the US, and tend to be more highly educated and 
better qualified than Muslims. Bethlehem's Christian population is, therefore, in 
danger of disappearing.

Mr Kasis said: "Can you imagine Bethlehem without Christians? The Church of the 
Nativity without Christians?". He looks from his balcony to where the route of the 
fence is being prepared. "That's why they are doing this," he said. "To make us 
leave." 

            The Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Uganda is in anarchy"
            Groupe de communication Mulindwas 
"avec Yoweri Museveni, l'Ouganda est dans l'anarchie"


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