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THE APARTHEID WALL
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By Jamaal Jumaa
Contrary to worldwide news reports, the Wall (also referred to as the
“fence” or “security fence”) which Israel is currently building in
the northeast of the West Bank, as well as in the Bethlehem and Jerusalem
areas, will not mark the 1967 border, also known as the Green Line.
Rather, amidst some of the most fertile land in Palestine, this latest
unilateral offensive will be a further exercise in Israel’s annexation
of lands, destruction of agriculture and property, and violation of human
rights.
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"The Wall will not mark the 1967
border"
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The construction and destruction revolving around the
Apartheid Wall is to move full-force in the coming months
and the Wall could be completed in less than one year. The
prospects of a completed wall are horrific, and will
translate into the confiscation and annexation of some 10%
of the West Bank, the destruction of hundreds of thousands
of dunums of farmland including the uprooting of hundreds
of thousands of trees, the demolition of homes, and the
tragic “advancement” of the closure and siege policy
that will leave thousands of families landless, jobless,
hungry, and hopeless. The image of cities and villages
encircled by checkpoints, by-pass roads, and settlements
is now being accompanied by an 8-meter high concrete wall
with trenches, electric fences, sensors, cameras, and
armed watchtowers.
The Apartheid Wall Campaign was born out of an October 2,
2002, meeting of the Palestinian Environmental NGOs
Network (PENGON) General Assembly, where it was decided
that PENGON, with the support of its member organizations,
must make the Wall a priority of its work; and, stating
clearly that successful efforts on behalf of the Wall must
be joint and widespread, both in local efforts, and in
international advocacy.
PENGON counts 21 member organizations-the majority of West
Bank and Gaza environmental organizations-which deal with
a variety of environmental issues including land
protection and development, water, agriculture, pollution,
health, sustainable development, biodiversity, and
cultural heritage. PENGON was born out of a call at the
start of this Intifada to ensure coordinated and effective
efforts among NGOs to deal with the environmental
consequences of Occupation and the increased Israeli
(military, settlements, industrial) assaults on life and
land in the Occupied Territories.
The Campaign itself sees its aim as two fold: on the one
hand, to work and mobilize against the Wall and its
immediate and expected consequences to environment and
human rights; and on the other hand, to shed light on the
expanding stranglehold of the Occupation, marked by
checkpoints, closures, siege, settlements, and the Wall.
The larger context is the underlying motivation behind the
Campaign. The Campaign looks to integrate local needs and
efforts with information collection and international
advocacy. Among other things, the Apartheid Wall Campaign
organizes visits to the northern West Bank areas affected
by the Wall.
Local councils, farmers unions, and other grassroots
organizations have also formally joined the Campaign. In
addition, the first and second Emergency Centers for the
Campaign have already been established in the Tulkarem and
Qalqiliya areas where information collection, meetings
among the communities and with local and international
solidarity groups, social mobilization coordination, and
public and legal services are to take place in relation to
the Wall. The third Emergency Center is currently being
established in Jenin. To date, the Campaign is
overwhelmingly a volunteer effort.
The first phase of the Apartheid Wall is currently taking
place in the northern West Bank, where the Apartheid Wall
will reach an approximate length of 115km. Fifteen
villages will be trapped between the Wall and the Green
Line, while the built-up (residential) areas of at least
15 villages will be east of the Apartheid Wall with a
significant portion of their lands on the other side. The
city of Qalqiliya, which is the urban center for the
entire area, will be completely encircled by the Apartheid
Wall. In addition, approximately 30 groundwater wells
which have a total discharge of 4 million cubic meters per
year (4 MCM/year) will be out of bounds, having been
separated by the Wall from the villages depending on them,
meaning even further Israeli control over Palestinian
water resources. Falamya, for example, is to loose its
main source of water.
The reference in the international media to a “fence”
being placed to separate the “two sides” should be
seen more as a cynical, unrepresentative use of terms than
any real reflection of the Wall itself, both in its
massive physical structure and its implications on the
lives of tens (if not hundreds) of thousands of people.
The separation rhetoric, which should remind everyone of
the Afrikaans word for separation--“Apartheid”--is not
a reflection of real geographic or a historic physical
divide between two peoples, but rather is reference to
Israel’s continued campaign of forcible, unilateral
separation and expulsion plans that disregard national or
economic sovereignty for Palestinians. The Wall just
furthers the “bantustanization” of the West Bank into
hundreds of small, dependent entities that cannot sustain
themselves and that are more akin to small, disconnected
open-air prisons surrounded by Israeli military
checkpoints and settlements, than anything else.
To contact the Campaign, and for more details about
the Apartheid Wall, including Report #1, please visit
www.pengon.org or write the Campaign/PENGON at outreach@pengon.org.
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