Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, December 1998, pages
25, 95
Special Report
Israeli Forces Open Fire on Arab Citizens of
Israel Protesting Land Confiscations Inside Israeli Borders
By Maureen Meehan
A powerful event took place in late September in Umm
al-Fahm, a Palestinian town inside Israels borders, that has
many here wondering if a sleeping giant is beginning to open its
eyes. Palestinians who hold Israeli citizenship are once again reminded
that in a state defined as a Jewish State, their position as a national
minority is that of second-class citizens, discriminated against
and oppressed violently when the need arises.
Three days of violent clashes took place in Umm al-Fahm,
north of Tel Aviv, when Israeli police and soldiers broke up a peaceful
protest held in a tent near the town. The protest was in response
to an Israeli decree to expropriate 10,000 acres of land belonging
to the areas residents and turn them into a shooting range
for the Israeli army.
Palestinians who live in villages in this area, known
as al-Roha, are all too aware that such confiscations for military
use usually end up as new Jewish towns or settlements.
These massive land confiscations not only prevent
our overcrowded villages from naturally expanding, but they are
part of a larger plan to keep us off the land so Israel can eventually
settle it and break up any territorial integrity that exists either
here or anywhere else where Palestinians live inside Israel,
said Tawfiq Jabareen, an attorney from Umm al-Fahm who is a member
of the Popular Committee for the Defense of the Lands of al-Roha.
Jabareen, who studied law at American University and
interned at the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People (NAACP), told the Washington Report that the Israeli
government has long-term designs on this and other Arab-owned land
in Israel. He referred to the Israeli 2020 Plan that foresees the
building of some 300,000 homes for Jews by the year 2020.
The first step is to confiscate our land using
all manner of laws, decrees, and ordinances which are blatantly
discriminatory and which basically make it impossible to keep our
land or to get anything back that was taken when the state was formed,
he explained.
The government tells us we can grow vertically
rather than horizontally. In other words, Palestinian ghettos with
skyscrapers and no land, he said, using Umm al-Fahm as an
example. Were bursting at the seams with 36,000 people
and the government refuses to allow us to build on the surrounding
land—our land, which is now subject to confiscation.
Large sectors of land in the al-Roha area had already
been expropriated in 1948 for use by the military. In fact, by the
early 1950s the state became owner of 92 percent of all land in
Israel, a figure that has increased to 95 percent to include subsequent
confiscations. Expropriation of Palestinian-owned land is carried
out with the help of over 30 laws. All confiscated land is subject
to the Israeli Basic Land Laws that ensure no state lands can be
transferred either by sale or any other means.
Legal struggles to regain land are doomed by the complicated
system of state ownership and private land held by the Jewish National
Fund and Development Agency, who together own one-third of the land
in Israel. Both agencies have close links with the Israeli government.
The JNF is essentially a cover for the government against accusations
of discriminatory and racist land policies in that the institution
was set up expressly to settle persons of the Jewish religion,
race or origin, according to its constitution.
Despite the earlier confiscation of land in al-Roha,
army trainers and Palestinian farmers in the area managed to keep
out of each others way over the years as the latter tended
their crops and grazed their sheep and cattle and the former conducted
military exercises.
That status quo came to an end, however, when the Israeli
government issued a decree in May stating that Palestinian landowners
would no longer be permitted to set foot on the land. The infamous
Green Patrol, a mobile unit that functions under the Ministry of
Agriculture to protect state lands, was sent in.
After several incidents of armed intimidation and confiscation
of livestock by the Green Patrol, people of Umm al-Fahm and other
villages set up a tent on the land and remained there around the
clock for three weeks in protest. Without warning on Sept. 27, hundreds
of Israeli police and cavalry charged the tent, tore it down and
three days of fierce confrontations began.
Hundreds of people were injured in clashes as Israeli
soldiers and police attacked with live ammunition, rubber- and plastic-coated
bullets, tear gas and baton charges. During the three days of fighting
Israeli ambulances were prevented by police from entering the town
to evacuate the seriously injured, who were treated at a small clinic
in Umm al-Fahm. The teachers lounge in the local high school
was turned into a first aid center, although shortly afterward the
school was raided by soldiers, who fired at students in the school
yard as well as in the halls and through the windows.
The whole school was full of tear gas as we were
treating the wounded, said M. Mohamad, the school principal.
The soldiers shot wildly at kids in the school yard. It was
frightening chaos. Two teenage boys, shot at close range in
the school yard with rubber-coated bullets, have permanently lost
their eyesight.
Dr. Suleiman Igbaria, deputy mayor of Umm al-Fahm, who
was beaten and arrested for two days during the disturbances, admitted
he was shocked at the ferocity of the attack by the Israeli armed
forces.
We see such things in the West Bank and Gaza where
there is still occupation but here were in a so-called democratic
state, Igbaria said. If there was ever any question
about our identity and whether weve been integrated—well,
the answer is very clear. We are 100 percent Palestinian and Israel
treats us as such... like second- or third-class citizens.
Igbaria said the struggle for the land will continue,
although a three-month moratorium was agreed upon by both sides
with the idea of working out an agreement. Under the terms of the
moratorium, landowners can tend to their trees or graze their sheep
but only with prior permission from the authorities. For the time
being, the Green Patrols have left the area, but are never far away.
Maureen Meehan
is a free-lance journalist who covers Jerusalem and the West Bank.
SIDEBAR
GREEN PATROLS—ENVIRONMENTAL PARAMILITARY
Set up in 1976 under the Ministry of Agriculture, the
Green Patrols are less concerned with conserving nature than with
intimidating and harassing Palestinian and Bedouin farmers
accused of stealing state land, explained attorney
Tawfiq Jabareen.
The Green Patrol operates in coordination with the Jewish
National Fund and the Jewish Agency. According to a report in the
independent Israeli magazine News From Within, a quarter
of its budget comes from the ministry of security, followed by several
other ministries and agencies including the JNF.
Ariel Sharon, Israels newly appointed foreign
minister, fostered the Green Patrols during his term as agriculture
minister in the late 1970s when he pursued a policy of evicting
Bedouin from the Negev desert and implemented the not one
inch of land to Arabs approach.
The Green Patrols are most active, at the moment, in
the Negev desert, where for the past 500 years the Bedouin were
almost exclusive inhabitants. Uri Okbi, Bedouin rights leader, says
the Green Patrol has herded and harassed the Bedouin tribes, demolished
their homes, sprayed their crops with anti-foliant chemicals (a
strange act for a nature reserve ranger), and killed and confiscated
their animals. In August, a young man riding in the rear of a small
van was shot and killed for wandering into an army shooting range.
The ranger who shot the man spent two hours in custody and was later
released.
The Green Patrols job is to remove us from
our land, kill our animals and ultimately our way of life,
said Okbi. Theyre in charge of ethnically cleansing
the Negev of all Bedouin.—M.M. |