The U.N. humanitarian coordinator for the Palestinian territories Friday
criticized Israel’s demolition of 36 homes in the Jordan Valley and
urged a halt to such actions in the West Bank.
Hundreds of activists, meanwhile, staged an overnight demonstration in the Jordan Valley region.
The moves came as fresh opinion poll evidence showed that faith in the Middle East peace process has largely evaporated among both Israelis and Palestinians.
The demolitions in the Jordan Valley community of Ain el-Helwe on Thursday displaced 66 people, including 36 children, James Rawley said in a statement.
“I am deeply concerned about the ongoing displacement and dispossession of Palestinians... along the Jordan Valley where the number of structures demolished more than doubled in the last year,” he said.
“This activity not only deprives Palestinians of access to shelter and basic services, it also runs counter to international law.”
His office said more than 1,000 people had been displaced last year in the West Bank and annexed east Jerusalem by demolitions on the grounds that homes had been built without Israeli permits, “which are virtually impossible to obtain.”
On Friday, around 300 Palestinians together with Israeli and foreign activists set up camp in abandoned houses near Jericho in the West Bank to protest against Israel’s refusal to pull out of the Jordan Valley in case of a peace deal, an AFP photographer said.
The demonstrators in Ain Hijleh village were equipped with generators and said they planned to spend the night in around a dozen of the houses, as Israeli troops and police kept watch from a distance.
They held a banner reading: “No peace with settlements.”
Their action -- dubbed “Melh al-Ard” (salt of the earth) -- aimed “to revive an old Palestinian Canaanite village in the Jordan Valley,” to counter any Israeli annexation plans, the activists said in a statement.
They condemned Jewish settlement construction in the West Bank and the Israeli-Palestinian peace process brokered by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry.
His efforts would “establish a disfigured Palestinian state and recognizes the Israeli entity as a Jewish state,” they said.
Such a state would put Arab Israelis at risk of deportation at any time, the activists said.
Faith in the Middle East peace process has largely evaporated among Israelis and Palestinians in the two decades since the Oslo accords and a famous White House lawn handshake, a new poll found Friday.
Although two decades have elapsed since then Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin shook hands watched by then U.S. leader Bill Clinton, “it is clear several deep differences exist” plaguing the atmosphere between the two sides.
“Twenty years later only 18 percent of Palestinians and 19 percent of Israelis view Oslo as a positive development in the history of their relationship,” the poll said.
Both sides believe the other is not committed to peace.
And only around a third of people in each community sees a two-state solution as feasible, even though 74 percent of Israelis and 47 percent of Palestinians agree it is the desired outcome.
“From the results of this poll, it is clear that the past 20 years have taken a toll on the confidence both Palestinians and Israelis have in the peace process that began with the 1993 signing of the Oslo accords,” the poll said.
Twenty years ago both Palestinians, some 61 percent, and Israelis, some 54 percent, said they “were hopeful” when the Oslo accords were signed, setting out a roadmap for the peace process.
The poll was carried out in the Middle East in August 2013 among 1,000 Israelis and Palestinians, just as Kerry persuaded the two sides to resume talks after a three-year hiatus.
http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2014/02/01/U-N-slams-Israel-destruction-of-Jordan-valley-homes-.html
1/2/14
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Related:
Hundreds of activists, meanwhile, staged an overnight demonstration in the Jordan Valley region.
The moves came as fresh opinion poll evidence showed that faith in the Middle East peace process has largely evaporated among both Israelis and Palestinians.
The demolitions in the Jordan Valley community of Ain el-Helwe on Thursday displaced 66 people, including 36 children, James Rawley said in a statement.
“I am deeply concerned about the ongoing displacement and dispossession of Palestinians... along the Jordan Valley where the number of structures demolished more than doubled in the last year,” he said.
“This activity not only deprives Palestinians of access to shelter and basic services, it also runs counter to international law.”
His office said more than 1,000 people had been displaced last year in the West Bank and annexed east Jerusalem by demolitions on the grounds that homes had been built without Israeli permits, “which are virtually impossible to obtain.”
On Friday, around 300 Palestinians together with Israeli and foreign activists set up camp in abandoned houses near Jericho in the West Bank to protest against Israel’s refusal to pull out of the Jordan Valley in case of a peace deal, an AFP photographer said.
The demonstrators in Ain Hijleh village were equipped with generators and said they planned to spend the night in around a dozen of the houses, as Israeli troops and police kept watch from a distance.
They held a banner reading: “No peace with settlements.”
Their action -- dubbed “Melh al-Ard” (salt of the earth) -- aimed “to revive an old Palestinian Canaanite village in the Jordan Valley,” to counter any Israeli annexation plans, the activists said in a statement.
They condemned Jewish settlement construction in the West Bank and the Israeli-Palestinian peace process brokered by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry.
His efforts would “establish a disfigured Palestinian state and recognizes the Israeli entity as a Jewish state,” they said.
Such a state would put Arab Israelis at risk of deportation at any time, the activists said.
Faith in the Middle East peace process has largely evaporated among Israelis and Palestinians in the two decades since the Oslo accords and a famous White House lawn handshake, a new poll found Friday.
- According to the Zogby Research Services poll, neither side has much confidence in the new push for peace being led by Kerry, which the pollsters believe is proving a hard sell.
Although two decades have elapsed since then Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin shook hands watched by then U.S. leader Bill Clinton, “it is clear several deep differences exist” plaguing the atmosphere between the two sides.
“Twenty years later only 18 percent of Palestinians and 19 percent of Israelis view Oslo as a positive development in the history of their relationship,” the poll said.
Both sides believe the other is not committed to peace.
And only around a third of people in each community sees a two-state solution as feasible, even though 74 percent of Israelis and 47 percent of Palestinians agree it is the desired outcome.
“From the results of this poll, it is clear that the past 20 years have taken a toll on the confidence both Palestinians and Israelis have in the peace process that began with the 1993 signing of the Oslo accords,” the poll said.
- Kerry is trying to draw up a framework agreement which would set out the end game in the resumed negotiations and guide the talks going forward over the next few months.
Twenty years ago both Palestinians, some 61 percent, and Israelis, some 54 percent, said they “were hopeful” when the Oslo accords were signed, setting out a roadmap for the peace process.
The poll was carried out in the Middle East in August 2013 among 1,000 Israelis and Palestinians, just as Kerry persuaded the two sides to resume talks after a three-year hiatus.
http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2014/02/01/U-N-slams-Israel-destruction-of-Jordan-valley-homes-.html
1/2/14
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Related:
- Kerry leaves Middle East without achieving framework...
Ισραήλ: Απορρίπτουν οι κυβερνητικοί εταίροι του Νετανιάχου το ειρηνευτικό σχέδιο του Κέρι
Kerry gains Arab backing for framework peace plan...
Israel court orders govt to explain barrier route...
ReplyDeleteIsrael's top court has given the government two months to explain why is has not proposed an alternative route for the West Bank barrier in a valley near Jerusalem.
The decision, handed down by the High Court Monday, relates to an appeal by Palestinian residents of Beit Jala, who say the proposed route will separate them from their olive groves and divide the local Christian community.
The residents say that if the defence ministry insists on building through the middle of the Cremisan Valley, it would mean 58 families losing their land and would split the Roman Catholic Salesian order's properties, leaving a monastery on the Israeli side and a convent on the Palestinian side.
The land in question is a valley between the sprawling settlement neighbourhood of Gilo in annexed east Jerusalem, and the smaller West Bank settlement of Har Gilo, which lies just a few kilometres to the southwest.
At a hearing last week, the Council for Peace and Security, a group of high-ranking former Israeli security officials, proposed an alternative route for the barrier which it said would save most of the villagers' land and better ensure Israel's security needs.
On Monday, the court ordered the defence ministry to explain in writing "why other alternatives to the route of the fence were not examined... and why an alternative route had not been adopted."
It also asked why four seizure orders relating to Palestinian land in the Cremisan Valley had not been cancelled.
The ministry has until April 10 to submit its response in writing.................http://www.france24.com/en/20140204-israel-court-orders-govt-explain-barrier-route/
4/2/14
Israeli demolition of Palestinian homes at five-year high: aid groups...
ReplyDelete(Reuters) - Aid agencies working in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem expressed alarm on Friday at a spike in Israeli demolitions of Palestinian property coinciding with renewed U.S.-backed peace negotiations.
The statement by 25 aid organizations said the number of demolitions increased by almost half and the displacement of Palestinians by nearly three-quarters between July 2013, when the talks began, and the end of the year, compared to the same period in 2012.
Of the 663 Palestinian structures torn down last year, the highest number in five years, 122 were built with international donor aid, the groups said.
The International Red Cross announced this week it would stop delivering tents to Palestinians made homeless by demolitions in the Jordan border region of the occupied West Bank, citing Israeli obstruction and confiscation of aid.
"International and local aid organizations have faced increasingly severe restrictions in responding to the needs created by the unlawful demolition of civilian property, in violation of Israel's obligation to facilitate the effective delivery of aid," wrote the groups, which included Oxfam and Christian Aid.
Israeli military and political officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment...........http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/02/07/us-israel-palestinians-demolitions-idUSBREA160N620140207?feedType=RSS&feedName=worldNews
7/2/14