Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Israel Ethnically Cleanses West Bank, World Turns Its Back

By Farol

One of the unspoken rules of our establishment press (and our political establishment in general) is that the Israeli government can do no wrong. Israel, we are told, is a beacon of democratic freedom in a land dominated by barbarians. Their interests are ours because they are peace-loving and good, and whatever military action they take is always in self-defense.

Because of this unspoken rule, the many horrendously brutal policies Israel has enacted over the years have been under-reported, if even reported at all, here. When, before the recent raids in Gaza, an Israeli defense minister threatened the people of Gaza with "a bigger shoah", this extraordinarily chilling statement received no mention here. Later, when the Israeli military denied wounded Gazans access to medical care, that, too, went unnoticed. But, after the raids, when eight Israeli students were killed by a Palestinian suicide bomber, the story was right up there on the front page of the New York Times. So it goes, and so it will continue to go for a long while.

In order to read truly balanced coverage of this conflict, you have to go to non-American news sources. In the latest issue of The Guardian, Rory McCarthy has an excellent article detailing Israel's ongoing demolition of Palestinian homes in the West Bank in order to make room for more (illegal) settlements. The piece should be read in full, but some relevant excerpts follow:

In the end it came down to a single-page letter, written in Hebrew and Arabic and hand-delivered by an Israeli army officer who knocked at the front door. The letter spelt the imminent destruction of the whitewashed three-storey home and small, tree-lined garden that Bassam Suleiman spent so long saving for and then built with his family a decade ago.

It was a final demolition order, with instructions to evacuate the house within three days.

If Suleiman was in any doubt about the Israeli military's intentions he had only to look outside his back door where large piles of rubble and broken concrete mark the remains of the seven of his neighbours' houses that were demolished in the same way last year.

"How would you feel when you've spent 20 years finishing your life's project?" said Suleiman, 38, a teacher. He began moving his furniture out after the letter, from the civil administration of Judea and Samaria, the defence ministry department responsible for the Israeli-occupied West Bank, came on January 31. Now there are just a couple of plastic chairs in his front room and in the hallway the carpets are rolled up and ready to be moved. Clothes are piled on the floor and the shelves are empty, save for a stack of documents charting the story of the impending demolition. His brother, Husam, has already left the ground floor flat but the new washing machine and fridge stand still wrapped in plastic. Suleiman, his wife and two children wait for the bulldozers.

"Everything I did in my life was for what's now inside this house and now it's going to be destroyed," said Suleiman. "It's very hard for me to find somewhere else to live."

The Israeli authorities argue that Suleiman's house was built in a part of the West Bank known as area C, a designation from the era of the Oslo Accords which means Israel has full military and administrative control. In order to build, a Palestinian must apply for a permit from the Israeli authorities. If there is no permit - as in Suleiman's case - the building is liable for demolition.


(...)


Area C covers 60% of the West Bank, home to around 70,000 Palestinians. It is also the area in which most Jewish settlements, all illegal under international law, are built. Compelling statistical evidence shows that while it is extremely hard for Palestinians to obtain building permits, settlements continue to grow rapidly.

Research by the Israeli group Peace Now found that 94% of Palestinian permit applications for Area C building were refused between 2000 and September 2007. Only 91 permits were granted to Palestinians, but 18,472 housing units were built in Jewish settlements. As a result of demolition orders 1,663 Palestinian buildings were demolished, against only 199 in the settlements. "The denial of permits for Palestinians on such a large scale raises the fear that there is a specific policy by the authorities to encourage a 'silent transfer' of the Palestinian population from area C," Peace Now said.

The article goes on to detail not only how the rate of demolitions has increased over the past year, but how some Palestinians who were originally told their homes weren't even in Area C are now finding them demolished, as well. "Silent transfer" is too polite a term: this is ethnic cleansing, pure and simple.

But I know this ethnic cleansing isn't really Israel's fault. I know Israel has no choice but to do this, because Barack Obama told me that the conflict in the Middle East "emanates from the perverse and hateful ideologies of radical Islam."

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