SOPHISTICATED TRANSFER
Tanya Reinhart
Yediot Aharonot, April 10, 2003; translated from Hebrew by Irit Katriel
On the eve of the Iraq war, fears were expressed in different circles
that under the cover of war, Israel may attempt a transfer of Palestinians in
the “seam line” area of the northern West Bank (Kalkilya, Tulkarem). Last week,
the army produced a scene from this scenario. On April 2 at 3 AM, a large force
raided the refugee camp of Tulkarem, blocked all the roads and paths with
barbed wires and announced on loudspeakers that all males aged 15 to 40 must go
to a certain compound at the center of the camp. At 9 in the morning, the army
began to transport the gathered males to a nearby refugee camp. This time it
was only a staged scene, and the residents were allowed to return after a few
days. But the producers of this show made sure that its significance would not
escape the participants and the audience. They took special care that
evacuation be done with trucks - an exact re-enactment of the 1948 trauma. As
one of the residents described his feelings when he got on the truck, "all
the memories and childhood stories of my father and grandfather about the Nakba
came back” (Regular, Ha’aretz, March 4, 2003, attached below).
Many interpret this show as a “general rehearsal” for the possibility of a
future transfer. There is no doubt that the current government is mentally
prepared for transfer, but it is not certain that the “international
conditions” are ripe for executing this in the way that was staged. The war
Iraq has become to entangled for the U.S. to to risk opening another
flashpoint. But transfer is not just trucks. In the Israeli history of “land
redemption” there is also another model, more hidden and sophisticated. In the
framework of the “Judaization of the Galilee” project, which has begun in the
1950s, the Palestinians that remained in Israel were robbed of half their
lands, isolated in small enclaves, surrounded by Israeli settlements, and
gradually lost the bonds that held them together as a nation. Such an internal
transfer is occurring now in the occupied territories, and it has been
escalated during the war.
On 24/3, the bulldozers got on the lands of the village of Mas'ha, which is
near the settlement of Elkana, and began to mark there the new route of the
separation wall, which will disconnect the village from all of its lands, as
well as thousands of dunams belonging to Bidia and other villages in the area.
Elkana is about 7 kilometers away from the green line, but the route of the
fence was changed on June 2002 so that it will include Elkana as well in the
Israeli side. Still, even in this plan, it is not necessary to take these lands
from the villages.
It wasn’t only land greed that sent the bulldozers to the lands of Bidia and
Mas'ha. These lands are on the western part of the Mountain groundwater basin -
the large water reservoir originating in the West Bank, whose water flow under
the ground also to the center of Israel. Out of six hundred million CM
(cubic-meter) of water that the Mountain reservoir provides in a year, Israel
withdraws in different areas about five hundred million (1). Control over the
water sources has always been a central Israeli motivation for maintaining the
occupation. The Labor governments of the seventies located the first
settlements that they approved in areas defined as "critical
locations" for drilling. Elkana was one of these settlements, founded
within a plan that was given the (misleading) name “preservation of the sources
of the Yarkon" (2). Since the occupation in 1967, Israel prohibited
Palestinians from digging new wells, but in the lands of Mas'ha and Bidia, as
well as in lands that were already cut off from Kalkilia and Tul Karem, there
are still many operating wells from before 1967. Their continued use may reduce
a little the amount that Israel can withdraw.
The residents of Mas'ha and Bidia, who are struggling to save their lands and
livelihoods, set up protest tents along the bulldozer path. “Peace tents”, they
called them in an outburst of hope. Palestinians, Israelis and Internationals
have been staying in these tents day and night to watch and stand in
front of the bulldozers. I was there on Saturday. Around, in all directions,
hills and hills of olive trees - huge areas of a green and pastoral landscape
that one can find only where people live on their land for generations and
generations, aware of its preciousness and beauty. And all this land is now
being grabbed by the land redemptionists, who would dry its wells and sell it to
real-estate investors.
=========
(1) These are the pre-Oslo figures for 1993, as quoted in Haim Gvirzman
"Two in the same basin", Ha'aretz, May 16, 1993. According to
the Palestinian Hydrology group, at the present, out of the annual
recharge of the western part of the Mountain Groundwater Basin, which is
362 million CM/year, the total Palestinian withdrawal is only 22 million
CM/year (www.pengon.org,
Report #1.)
(2) Gvirzman, ibid.
==============
Ha'aretz, Friday, April 04, 2003 Nisan 2.
'Where shall we go, to Baghdad?,' deported Tul Karm men ask
IDF
By Arnon Regular
In a side room in the mosque of Nur Shams refugee camp in Tul karm, a few
bearded young men were toiling over giant pots. They were preparing lunch for
the newly-arrived refugees, their neighbors from the Tul karm refugee camp, who
on Wednesday were forced out of their homes by the IDF.
The locals have been tending to the needs of the newcomers since they arrived.
They provide them not only with warm meals and water, but also make sure they
have access to telephones, so that they can communicate with the women,
children and elderly who were left behind, in the camp in the east of Tul karm.
As the first men started arriving, Fatah operatives in Nur Shams started making
sleeping arrangements for the approaching night. Of the 2,000 men who were
forced out of their homes, some were taken in to homes of Nur Shams residents,
some got mattresses and blankets and slept at the local mosque, and others
moved on to the villages east of town. Others spent the night in the orchards
surrounding the camp.
On Wednesday, IDF soldiers and border police gathered all men aged 15-40 at the
Tul karm camp and then transferred them to the Nur Shams camp, four kilometers
to the east. The IDF explained that this was part of an operation designed to
capture wanted terrorists in the camp. Yesterday afternoon groups of men were
still making their way by foot to Nur Shams. These were men who did not comply
with the IDF's original order to gather and stayed at home They were found in
door-to-door searches.
But most of the men were relocated from the Tul karm camp on Wednesday. A
little after 3 A.M., the residents of the camp awoke to the sound of gunfire,
stun grenades and helicopters. According to residents' reports, a large IDF
force stormed the camp from all directions.
Soldiers and policemen blocked all roads leading to and from the camp with
barbed wire, and jeeps and tanks started moving inside. Jeeps driving through
the camp announced on loudspeakers that all men and boys aged 15-40 must take
their IDs and report to a compound in the center of the camp, where the two
schools that UNRWA runs are located.
Within minutes a long line of men formed on the way to the schools. When they
got their, they were frisked. Their mobile phones were taken, and were only
returned once the soldiers finished making logs of all the telephone numbers
stored in memory - probably in order to check if anyone has any ties with
wanted terrorists.
Khaled Abu Said, a 30-year-old resident, said that after the IDs were checked
and no one from the wanted list was found, "they just sat us there for a
few hours. Sometime in the middle they brought some food, but there wasn't
enough for everyone. All this time the courtyard was quiet, and the soldiers
acted very naturally, with no violence and no shouting."
The soldiers divided arrivals into two groups, separating those aged 15-20 from
those aged 20-40. The younger group was led into classrooms, forced to tear
pictures of shahid (martyrs) off the walls and step on them.
At around 9 AM, a few hours after the operation began, a Druze officer
reportedly told a few hundred men on site: "You are leaving the camp.
Don't come back until it is all over." Abd a-Latif a-Sudani, 30, recalls:
"We asked him - `Where are we to go? To Baghdad?' And he said: `You'd be
better off there.'"
Abu Said said that at first the men did not realize what he meant, but shortly
afterward a truck arrived and the soldiers started herding groups of men onto
it. Accompanied by a border police jeep, the truck drove to Nur Shams, dropped
the passengers, and went back to take another group.
Several hours after the courtyard was emptied, the soldiers sent more men to
Nur Shams by foot. No exact numbers are available, but most of the men living
in the camp, which is home to around 18,000 people, have left over the last two
days and have not yet returned.
In the outskirts of the camp groups of young men congregated yesterday, trying
to figure out what was going on inside. When the IDF started canvassing from
door-to-door, soldiers only found women, children and old men. They were
looking for Islamic Jihad operative Nimer Khalil; apparently, he has not yet been
caught.
The residents of the camp were made to pay the price; most - if not all - of
the men who were relocated, are not connected in any way to terrorism. Most of
them are jobless, and survive on donations and UNRWA support.
Abu Said recounts what he felt when he got on the truck: "All at once all
the memories and stories my father and grandfather told me as a child about the
Naqba (catastrophe - the name Palestinians give to the 1948 founding of Israel
and the dispersal of their refugees).
We were all afraid they now we were being deported, and it was even scarier
thinking of the three-year-old girl and the wife you are leaving behind. But
what choice did we have but to get on the truck?"