West Bank Word

Entries tagged as ‘west bank’

Settler group makes ironic statement…

June 1, 2009 · Leave a Comment

As one of the more complicated world issues regularly in the news for the past several decades, the Palestinian-Israeli conflict offers countless varied topics to make headlines (ie, Gaza? Hamas? Palestinian Authority? Right-wing Israeli government? water issues, land confiscations, building permits, shootouts, on and on).

AFP photo of illegal West Bank settlers and burning Palestinian lands

AFP photo of illegal West Bank settlers and burning Palestinian lands

The spotlight in the past few weeks has been on the issue of illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank, in light of US President Obama’s pressure on the Netanyahu government to stop all forms of settlement building. Obama and Secretary of State Clinton have made clear and forceful statements in the last week that include the demand to halt “natural growth,” this vague idea of expansion, which the Israeli government won’t give in on.

The international community widely considers these West Bank settlements to be illegal under international law, because they are within the 1967 borders of the West Bank, within which Israel is an occupying military power.

A detailed illustration of all this can be found in the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)’s West Bank Closure Map, which shows the separation wall, the illegal settlements (colonies is the right word), the Palestinian Authority-controlled areas, checkpoints, etc, here:

UNOCHA West Bank Closure Map

And for some thoughtful analysis, here’s one of the better pieces that came out of the last week’s events:

From The Nation, Ali Abunima: Mr. Abbas Goes to Washington

But the more current news from the West Bank today comes from the Nablus area in the northern WB, home of such ultra-radical settlements as Yizhar. On Sunday night, according to this AFP story, mobs of settlers rampaged through Palestinian agricultural fields and roads, placing road blocks, attacking busloads of Palestinians, setting fire to olive groves, and opening fire on Palestinians and journalists. Apparently they’re “venting fury” at the idea that the Israeli government might give in to US demands to dismantle settlements/outposts.

To me, the craziest thing from this whole outrageous story was the following quote:

“It’s natural that people who face expulsion from their house do what they can to avoid being expelled.”

Why is that crazy? Because the person who said it, Gershon Messika, is the president of an Israeli settler umbrella group in the West Bank. (for the unfamiliar, it’s Palestinians who were expelled from their lands en masse when the State of Israel was created in 1948, and continue to be expelled from East Jerusalem, from areas seized for settlements, and from areas needed to build the behemoth separation wall).

Good luck figuring this one out, everybody.

Jewish settlers rampage in West Bank

By Imad Saada – 4 hours ago

NABLUS, West Bank (AFP) — Jewish settlers rampaged in the West Bank on Monday, wounding four Palestinians, as they vented fury that Israel may answer US calls and dismantle outposts in the territory, officials said.

Jewish extremists blocked roads, hurled rocks at drivers, burned fields, cut down olive trees and opened fire towards Palestinians who tried to chase the trespassers from their fields in the northern West Bank, witnesses said.

AFP article about rampage continues below….

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Categories: clashes · news
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Photos of life in Ramallah lately

February 16, 2009 · 1 Comment

Sheep graze outside my bedroom window in the middle of Ramallah

Sheep graze outside my bedroom window in the middle of Ramallah

The late afternoon view from my house in Ramallah

The late afternoon view from my house in Ramallah

The wood-burning oven at Angelos in Ramallah, which opened in 1988 and has the best lasagna and pizza in town

The wood-burning oven at Angelo's in Ramallah, which opened in 1988 and has the best lasagna and pizza in town

My new little family of desert plants for my home, which I and my aunt and uncle made from cuttings of their plants

My new little family of desert plants for my home, which I and my aunt and uncle made from cuttings of their plants

The sunset over the West Bank hills from my grandparents house in Ramallah

The sunset over the West Bank hills from my grandparents' house in Ramallah

A lemon tree hangs over the stone wall inside the Old City of Jerusalem

A lemon tree hangs over the stone wall inside the Old City of Jerusalem

Categories: photos · travels
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West Bank Palestinians Feel Gaza Almost Another Country

January 9, 2009 · Leave a Comment

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/sns-ap-ml-palestinians-west-bank-view,0,2973804.story

West Bank Palestinians feel as if warring Gaza has become another country

By BEN HUBBARD
Associated Press Writer
January 8, 2009

RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) — While one part of the Palestinian territories faces the fiercest Israeli onslaught in years, there is little to remind people in the other part of the war except for news reports, requests for blood donations and flags flying at half-staff.

Even pro-Gaza demonstrations have been suppressed by Palestinian police in the West Bank, sometimes violently.

Just 25 miles of Israeli territory separates the West Bank and Gaza, and Palestinians consider themselves one people and share the desire for a state. But decades of geographic separation and a political schism between the Islamic militant Hamas rulers of Gaza and the moderate Fatah faction that runs the West Bank are driving them toward different fates and leaving them increasingly isolated from each other.

“It’s as if Gaza has become another country,” said university student Mohammed Akram, 19, slightly embarrassed. Next to a sign bearing pictures of injured Gazans, he was listening to a pop song on his cell phone.

Around him, other students shuffled to class, toting books and sending text messages.

“Some people go out and protest, but most of us go to the university and live our normal lives,” said 19-year-old Aria Darwish, sitting under an olive tree and tapping on her laptop. “We don’t really feel it.”

Nearby, a flag flew at half-staff and a sign asked students to donate blood.

Israel launched airstrikes across Gaza on Dec. 27 and a ground invasion on Jan. 3, with a stated goal of undermining the ability of Hamas militants — who control Gaza but not the West Bank — to fire rockets at Israel.

Since then, more than 670 Palestinians have been killed, about half of them civilians, according to United Nations and Palestinian figures. In the same period, 10 Israelis have died, three of them civilians.

The fates of the two territories are largely tied to their respective rulers. Hamas seized control of Gaza in 2007 from forces loyal to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas of rival Fatah. Israel quickly imposed a blockade on the territory.
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Categories: clashes · news
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