EAPPI: research piece. An Nu'man: Decreasing options and increasing hardships

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Transcript of EAPPI: research piece. An Nu'man: Decreasing options and increasing hardships

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    An Numan

    Decreasing options and increasing hardships: An uncertain future for the residents

    of this West Bank village separated from its neighbours.

    October 2008

    Research and writing: Niina Karling

    Research, writing, editing: Scott Smith

    Photographs: Scott Smith

    Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme for Palestine and Israel (EAPPI) supports Palestinians

    and Israelis working for peace by monitoring and reporting violations of human rights and

    international law, offering protection by accompanying local communities in daily activities, and by

    advocating with churches for a peaceful end to the occupation. The programme, which began in

    2002, is coordinated by the World Council of Churches (WCC) within the Churches Commission

    on International Affairs (CCIA).

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    Introduction

    This report discusses Israels infringement of a number of human rights of residents of the

    Palestinian village of An Numan and its severe consequences on their right to work, to health

    care, to education and simply the right to a livelihood. We include relevant facts and their related

    legal context as we outline the main barriers to the above freedoms while we also include some

    short testimonies from residents in relation to their treatment at the hands of the Israeli forces.

    Setting the scene

    From An Numan you can see the towering apartment blocks of Har Homa, an Israeli settlement

    just a couple kilometres from the village boundaries, where the cranes of development are seen

    working all day long. From the settlement, it is possible to see increased livelihood, opportunity

    and a future. From An Numan you see a settlement inching closer, a cement surveillance tower

    behind you, and a highway that you can never use. Planning is impossible in the village and

    moving the only viable future.

    Deemed by the Israeli government to be living illegally in the same homes they have had for

    generations, options for the residents of An Numan are dwindling fast. Their removal from their

    homes is a slow, indirect one but no less effective. Rather than forcibly removing the people the

    Israeli government confines them in a closed space where they cannot expand their families, their

    land or their homes. This leads to the residents having no other option but to do this necessary

    expanding elsewhere An Numan is bleeding its inhabitants. The expansion of Har Homa

    settlement is on schedule.

    Background

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    An Numan is a small village south east of Jerusalem, lying just inside the separation barrier at

    Mazmouria checkpoint. Some 200 people live there in some 20 homes1 surrounded by three East

    Jerusalem settlements: Har Homa, Umm Tuba and Tsur Baher. Residents can only enter the

    village through one checkpoint and only then if they are registered residents and on the list

    visitors are not allowed. The normal duties such as shopping and going to school are greatly

    complicated by this checkpoint and harassment by Israeli soldiers or border police can be

    problematic.

    An Numans problems can largely be considered to be a bureaucratic mistake. The village was

    annexed to Jerusalem after 1967, when Israel occupied the West Bank, but in spite of this, most

    of the villagers have West Bank IDs due to being registered as residents of a neighbouring village

    inside the West Bank since it was in this village where their village leader ormukhtarlived. The

    absurd result is that the residents and their houses belong to different legal and administrative

    systems: the houses and land are part of the (annexed) Jerusalem municipality, while the

    inhabitants are residents of the West Bank.2 This makes the residents of An Numan illegal

    residents in the eyes of Israeli authorities, because people with West Bank IDs are not allowed to

    live on the Israeli side. The mistake has yet to be rectified and following the general closure of the

    West Bank in 1993, the problems of An Numan only got worse.

    Throughout the 1990s no permits were granted to build in the village and those who did build

    were promptly issued with demolition orders or forced to pay fines. In 1996 the children of An

    Numan were forced to leave the school in Umm Tuba, a village north of them, as they did not

    have the Jerusalem residency and so were not entitled to use the municipalitys school system.

    The road link to the nearest city, Bethlehem, was repeatedly closed for periods of 20-30 days

    between 1998 and 2003. During this time water pipes to the village were broken by Israeli

    1 Taayush The Silent Transfer: The case of El-Numan village.www.taayush.org2 ibid

    http://www.taayush.org/http://www.taayush.org/http://www.taayush.org/
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    bulldozers several times.3The village, being part of Jerusalem, is not permitted to receive any

    services from West Bank; despite that, the Jerusalem municipality refused to provide services to

    the people of Al-Numan and the village often went without water for days.

    At the beginning of April 2003, a man, who said he was the coordinator of the Housing Ministry,

    Defence Ministry, and the municipality, visited the village accompanied by border police. He wrote

    down the names and the identity numbers of all of the homeowners, and announced that they

    would have to leave the village since it was soon to become part of a no-man's-land between

    Israel and the Palestinian Territory. Those who built their homes before 1993 would receive

    compensation, but the remaining houses would be destroyed without any compensation. This

    man also stated the intention to build a wall that would surround the village with no gate for

    access to either the West Bank or Jerusalem. It was suspected that this also meant that water

    supplies and electricity to the village would also be permanently cut. Shortly following this visit,

    building of the separation barrier began in the area.

    A permanent military checkpoint, Mazmouria terminal, was opened in 2006 at the entrance of the

    village which only An Numan residents can pass through. It is the only way to the village.

    Officially, even medical doctors are not allowed entrance, although practically it depends much on

    the soldier in charge. An Numan has protested several times to the Ministry of Interior, to change

    the place of the wall or to get Jerusalem IDs, but they have not succeeded. According to

    Btselem4, an Israeli Human Rights centre, the failure of the village to reach an agreement on

    their status has much to do with an Israeli policy since 1967 to maintain a certain demographic

    balance. This effectively means that the percentage of Palestinians in Jerusalem should not be

    over a certain number, namely 25 percent.

    5

    3 Al-Haq An Numan Village: A case study of indirect forcible transfer. Pg10. November 20064http://www.btselem.org/English 5 Btselem An Numan, East Jerusalem: Life under the threat of expulsion. September 2003

    http://www.btselem.org/Englishhttp://www.btselem.org/Englishhttp://www.btselem.org/English
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    the West Bank. Along the same lines, Israeli authorities have uprooted telephone poles provided

    by the Palestinian Authority in 1998. Today the residents receive water services from the

    Palestinian Authority.9

    Food stuffs need to be purchased from outside the village, no emergency vehicles or staff in case

    of illness or accident is allowed into the village. The nearest medical clinic is in Dar Salah, two

    kilometres away. However, that clinic suffers from a chronic shortage of equipment and medicine,

    so residents use clinics in Beit Sahur, Bethlehem, or Beit Jala. 10

    Checkpoint abuse

    In addition to the severe restrictions on movement persistently imposed on An Numans

    residents, they endure physical harassment and psychological humiliation at the checkpoint.

    Numerous villagers have testified that they have been ordered to remove their clothes under

    threat of being shot. Children have also been subjected to intimidating and degrading treatment.11

    A number of international humanitarian groups have been involved in the documentation of abuse

    at the Mazmouria checkpoint and have even gone so far as to send letters to commanding

    officers of the region along with copies been sent to attorneys and foreign embassies.

    Testimonies

    According to Taayush there have been several reported harassments during August 2008.

    On Thursday, 7 August, a village woman was returning home from work at 15:00. She

    was detained for an hour and a half, under the pretext that she is not on the inhabitants'

    list. When her husband arrived to checkpoint her name suddenly did appear on the list.

    9 Taayush The Silent Transfer: The case of El-Numan village10 Btselem An Numan, East Jerusalem: Life under the threat of expulsion. Pg13. September 200311 Al-Haq An Numan Village: A case study of indirect forcible transfer. November 2006

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    Same thing happened to other woman at same week too.

    On Saturday, 9 August, at 20:00, two men were returning to the village. While one was

    permitted into the scanning room, another was made to stand inside the turnstile for over

    half an hour. Meanwhile, the other man was detained in the scanning room and the air-

    condition machine was turned to heating, rather than cooling while the windows and

    doors were shut. Despite the lack of air and his heavy sweating, he was not permitted by

    the soldier to leave. Finally, the soldier threw at him his ID card and ordered him to, "Get

    out of here". Some hours earlier the same day, two young women were insulted by a

    woman soldier.

    Legal conclusions

    What is occurring in An Numan is clearly a case ofindirectforcible transfer, not justified by the

    security of the occupied population, and neither by imperative military reasons. Furthermore, the

    concept of indirect forcible transfer is considered to be a war crime, stating that the transfer can

    occur directly or indirectly.12

    We feel isolated and under siege. The authorities, so we see, are trying to make things hard for

    us, to molest us and our children and to cut us off from our entire surroundings, all in order to

    hinder us and to cause us despair on the way to abandoning our village.13

    The right to freedom of movement is enshrined in Article 12 of the International Covenant on Civil

    and Political Rights. Also, according to Article 43 of The Hague Regulations, the occupier is

    12 Fourth Geneva Convention, Article 49, forbids forcible transfer regardless of the motive of the occupying

    power. According to Article 49, there are only two cases when forcible is allowed when it is demanded by

    the security of the population or for imperative military reasons13 Extract from affidavit given to Labib Habib, Adv., by Yousef Dirawi. Al-Haq An Numan Village: A

    case study of indirect forcible transfer. Pg35. November 2006

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    required to take all measures in its power to ensure that public life continues in the area under its

    control. The Israeli fence around the village infringes on the basic right granted to all persons to

    move about freely and without restrictions in their country. Under international law, Jerusalem has

    the same status as other areas on the West Bank, so village residents have the right to enter

    East Jerusalem.

    Israel has created in the Occupied Territory a regime of separation based on discrimination;

    applying two separate systems of law on the same area and basing the rights of individuals on

    their nationality. This is an unsustainable system. The Israeli government hopes to expel the

    residents from the village. It is highly unlikely, however, that the villagers will actually be forced

    out of their homes at gunpoint and put on buses. A more intricate strategy will be employed. By

    creating a physical barrier between the village and the West Bank (the separation fence) and not

    allowing the inhabitants to have any contact with either the Palestinian Authority or the Jerusalem

    municipality, their infrastructure of existence will be totally undermined. Ultimately they will leave

    the village of "their own accord."14

    The EAPPI calls for the halt of the development of the Har Homa settlement, deemed to be one

    of the fastest growing communities since opening in January 2002. With a future population

    expected to grow to 25000,15 the Jerusalem Municipality Master Plan 2000 clearly shows its

    planned extension (Har Homa D) adjacent to An Numan, on a portion (530 dunams) of the

    villages land. The EAPPI also calls on the Israeli government to, in light of a refusal to change

    the position of the separation barrier16, grant all residents of the village permanent residence

    status in Israel so they can have access to Jerusalem, as well as receive municipal services from

    the Jerusalem municipality and defined village boundaries.

    14 Taayush The Silent Transfer: The case of El-Numan village15 Tehilla, the voluntary movement for religious aliyah. http://www.tehilla.com16 A recent decision by Israeli High Court. See Al-Haq press release, Ref: 19.2008E 9 July 2008

    http://www.tehilla.com/http://www.tehilla.com/http://www.tehilla.com/