International

[ International ] [ Main Menu ]


  


54193


Date: May 12, 2024 at 05:48:23
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Israel razes entire Bedouin village to expand a highway

URL: https://www.972mag.com/israel-razes-bedouin-village-wadi-al-khalil/


Israel razes entire Bedouin village to expand a highway

The demolition of Wadi al-Khalil, an unrecognized village in the Naqab, left
over 300 citizens homeless despite their attempts to reach a compromise.

Oren Ziv
May 10, 2024

On the morning of May 8, Israeli forces razed the entire Bedouin village of
Wadi al-Khalil in the Naqab/Negev desert. The demolitions, which were
carried out in order to expand the Route 6 highway, left more than 300
residents homeless.

Wadi al-Khalil is one of 35 Bedouin villages in the Naqab whose existence the
Israeli authorities do not officially recognize; as a result, the villages, which
are home to around 150,000 Bedouin Arab citizens of Israel, face the
constant threat of demolition. Many of the villages are decades old — some
even pre-date Israel’s establishment — but they are prevented from
connecting to state infrastructure including water and electricity, and their
residents are denied municipal services.

According to the Regional Council for the Unrecognized Bedouin Villages,
Wednesday’s demolition was the largest in the Naqab for 14 years. It comes
as Israel’s National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir vows to crack down on
what he calls “lawbreakers” and restore meshilut — literally “governance,” a
euphemism for Jewish-Israeli control — to the area. Eight other unrecognized
villages are currently under threat of forced eviction under the guise of urban
development.

The police’s arrival in the village was not met with resistance. Officers
pushed the residents and a handful of solidarity activists to the outskirts of
the village before bringing in trucks and bulldozers. Contractors in yellow
vests removed furniture and any personal items that had been left inside the
residents’ homes and loaded them onto the trucks. A few horses and camels
wandered restlessly between the officers and vehicles as the bulldozers got
to work.

“You work eight or nine years, saving money to build a house, and then they
destroy it,” Yousef Abu Issa, a 35-year-old resident, told +972 and Local Call.
“They don’t give you another place to live, they don’t help you.”

As a precautionary measure Yousef had taken his children out of the village
before the demolitions began. He was sitting in his car when I spoke with
him, watching the police raze the buildings while smoke engulfed some of
the houses that residents themselves had set on fire before the authorities
could demolish them.

“Look how many police officers are here,” he said. “Where were they on
October 7? A force like this could conquer Lebanon. I feel no differently
toward them than I do toward the terrorists of the Nukhba [Hamas’ elite
commando unit]. I’m an Israeli citizen, loyal to the state, I do national service
— and this is what happens.”

Taleb el-Sana, a former Knesset member and a Bedouin Arab citizen,
described Wednesday’s demolitions and the government’s treatment of the
residents of the Naqab as “a declaration of war.”

“Ben Gvir wants to burn the Naqab,” el-Sana told +972. “Instead of solving
the problem through communication, [the government] thinks that
demolishing houses is the solution. But it’s not. We are citizens. Bedouins
were killed [on October 7], Bedouins are among the hostages being held by
Hamas in Gaza, and Bedouin houses have been hit by rockets. The solution is
to recognize villages, and grant people the basic right to live in dignity.”

‘We have never been opposed to a compromise’
Demolishing Bedouin houses in the Naqab is nothing new for the Israeli
authorities. The nearby village of Al-Araqib was recently razed for the 223rd
time. In 2017, police raided another unrecognized village, Umm al-Hiran, to
conduct demolitions that would see the small Bedouin community replaced
with a Jewish one; police in the village shot dead resident Yaqub Abu al-
Qi’an, falsely claiming he had tried to kill officers.

In 2010, the government approved a plan to extend Route 6 southward
through the lands of Wadi al-Khalil, despite opposition from the residents
and several NGOs. The residents repeatedly expressed their willingness to
relocate to the neighborhood of Al-Mitla, east of the Bedouin town of Tel as-
Sabi/Tel Sheva. But this proposal was rejected, and Israel’s Bedouin Authority
for Development and Settlement insisted instead that the residents move to
Neighborhood 1 in Umm Batin.

The residents opposed this plan out of fear for their own safety: according to
them, a large Bedouin family that currently lives next to Neighborhood 1
threatened violence against any other clans who settled there. “They offered
us a place in Neighborhood 1, a place that couldn’t work and where there
was a dispute,” Suleiman Abu Issa told +972. “If we moved there it would be
a mess: when a similar situation happened in Lakiya, it ended in murder.”

In February 2023, the residents of Wadi al-Khalil appealed to the Supreme
Court against their forced transfer to Neighborhood 1 and against the
demolition orders, but the appeal was rejected in December. The Court sided
with the state’s position that the move to Al-Mitla would delay the extension
of Route 6 by two years because the necessary infrastructure there is not yet
in place. Another appeal, in which the residents requested that the Interior
Ministry approve their relocation to Al-Mitla, is ongoing.

“We have never been opposed to finding a solution or a compromise,”
Suleiman explained. “Our demands are modest: an appropriate place [to live]
and adequate compensation. They said we were refusing [the government’s
expulsion orders], but this is not true.”

Dafna Saporta, from the Israeli planning rights organization Bimkom told
+972: “It’s not like the extension of Route 6 is being paved tomorrow — it
would have been possible to postpone and sit down with the residents, who
have been there for decades. The state had 15 years to reach agreements
with the residents regarding their evacuation. The residents didn’t refuse to
evacuate, they just didn’t agree to the solution that the state proposed in
Umm Batin because of conflicts with other families on the land.

“In the past, there were talks about trying to move the families to Al-Mitla —
this was approved by all the planning committees, and it got stuck with the
interior minister,” Saporta continued. “It was of course possible to prevent the
demolition and find a fair solution with the residents. They didn’t do it, and
instead they left over 300 people with destruction and pain. It is a testament
to [Israel’s] policy of doing things over the heads of residents through the
illegitimate pressure mechanism of house demolitions.”

‘The scenes of the Nakba are repeating’: Rafah in panic as Israeli invasion
begins

We’ve shown Gaza’s suffering for over 200 days. Don’t look away now
The current wave of demolitions in the Naqab is widely attributed to Ben Gvir
by residents and activists, and the national security minister’s office seemed
proud to take credit. In a press release on the morning of the demolition, his
office stated: “The demolition of dozens of illegal structures in the Abu Issa
cluster in the Negev was an important step for sovereignty and governance.
Indeed, as the minister promised upon taking office, there has been a
significant increase in the demolition of illegal houses in the Negev, and the
minister is proud to be leading this policy.

“Let every lawbreaker in the Negev know that the lands of the Negev have
not been abandoned, and that the State of Israel will fight a brutal war
against those who try to take over land and try to establish facts on the
ground,” the statement continued.

“Since the founding of the state,” Suleiman lamented, “there has been a
problem with [land] administration — but never anything like this, this kind of
stubbornness. When they talk to you it’s like they’re not talking to another
human being. The state has lost all shame. For them, ‘governance’ is simply
destruction.”

A version of this article was first published in Hebrew on Local Call. Read it
here.


Responses:
[54218] [54199] [54212] [54206] [54216]


54218


Date: May 13, 2024 at 03:54:53
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: 300 people left homeless...(NT)


(NT)


Responses:
None


54199


Date: May 12, 2024 at 09:41:44
From: mitra, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Israel razes entire Bedouin village to expand a highway-Propaganda




Yeah, yeah.

The Bedouin are not the enemy, but the town, as all
towns was built on a road, probably the best path for a
truck.

This proposed road has been in the works for more than
a YEAR AND A HALF. The Bedouin town lost an appeal to
the Supreme Court.

Perhaps there will be a chance for redress after the
war, Israelis are going to be busy doing that where
they can, and if they will. But this is clearly a case
of eminent domain.

The stituation was stuck in the Interior Department,
wonder what kept them so busy they couldn't slow things
down?

Personal belongings were removed. This was a surprise
to no one.

Now, just think if that were Hamas ploughing through.
How many would have died?








Responses:
[54212] [54206] [54216]


54212


Date: May 12, 2024 at 17:56:36
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Israel razes entire Bedouin village to expand a highway-Propaganda


Keep it up. You're a class act.


Responses:
None


54206


Date: May 12, 2024 at 17:02:59
From: chaskuchar@stcharlesmo, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Israel razes entire Bedouin village to expand a highway-Propaganda


i thought the town existed for centuries. are they able
to build adjacent to the town? or are they forced to
move to a place with no water or feed for live stock?


Responses:
[54216]


54216


Date: May 12, 2024 at 18:23:53
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Israel razes entire Bedouin village to expand a highway-Propaganda


yeah... I can't imagine why anyone would be upset with Israel.

"Wadi al-Khalil is one of 35 Bedouin villages in the Naqab whose existence
the Israeli authorities do not officially recognize; as a result, the villages,
which are home to around 150,000 Bedouin Arab citizens of Israel, face the
constant threat of demolition. Many of the villages are decades old — some
even pre-date Israel’s establishment — but they are prevented from
connecting to state infrastructure including water and electricity, and their
residents are denied municipal services.

According to the Regional Council for the Unrecognized Bedouin Villages,
Wednesday’s demolition was the largest in the Naqab for 14 years. It comes
as Israel’s National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir vows to crack down on
what he calls “lawbreakers” and restore meshilut — literally “governance,” a
euphemism for Jewish-Israeli control — to the area. Eight other unrecognized
villages are currently under threat of forced eviction under the guise of urban
development."



Responses:
None


[ International ] [ Main Menu ]

Generated by: TalkRec 1.17
    Last Updated: 30-Aug-2013 14:32:46, 80837 Bytes
    Author: Brian Steele