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Nora Barrows-Friedman
The Electronic Intifada
As the illegal Israeli occupation grinds on, the daily
situation for Palestinians worsens by the day.
Hebron presents a vivid picture of the cumulative
face of this colonial project.
Hebron, about 35km south of Jerusalem in the occupied West
Bank, has historically existed as a mixed
Muslim-Jewish city, but over the last few decades
the Israeli authorities have been choking its
150,000 Palestinians while supporting the settler
movement.
Approximately 650 radical right-wing settlers have
taken over parts of the old city, destroyed
Palestinian neighbourhoods and the economic
infrastructure, and are free to terrorise
Palestinians at whim.
Hebron is divided into two parts called H1 and H2,
drawing a line between the settlements and the rest
of the city. Today, most Palestinians are not
allowed anywhere near H2.
Once a bustling marketplace and residential neighbourhood,
that part of the city has become essentially a ghost
town inhabited by settlers who are protected by the
occupation soldiers and the Israeli police force.
Graffiti is sprayed all over the closed metal shop doors and
mosques, with Stars of David and slogans such as
'Kill the Arabs', 'God will take revenge on the
non-religious', 'Arabs to the gas chambers'.
Hani Abu Akker was born in his house 40 years ago in the Tel
Rumeida neighbourhood, now a part of H2, at the top
of a steep hill that overlooks the old city of
Hebron. Here, the cacophony of the lively
Palestinian market below blends with the shouts and
sounds of children playing soccer against the walls
of apartments near Hani's home.
"See this street? My father built it with his own hands in
1945, before there was anything called Israel," he
told IPS, standing near the house where he now lives
at the bottom of the hill.
Abu Akker cannot enter his home through the front door.
Barbed wire and steel bars enclosing his home are
only minimal protection against the ongoing attacks
and harassment he and his family of ten face almost
daily. To come and go from home, Abu Akker must use
the backdoor, cross a small, muddy meadow and
circumvent the neighbourhood from the back.
Abu Akker's house is in the middle of a colonial war zone,
and the Israeli soldier behind a small pillbox
barrack mandates who comes and goes up and down his
street. Jewish settlers roam the streets often
carrying firearms.
Israeli Yehuda Shaul knows too well the structure of policy
and law enforcement in Hebron. Co-founder of the
left-wing activist group Breaking the Silence, Shaul
earlier spent his mandatory military service as
commander of a battalion stationed in the H2
district.
"All you need to know about the occupation you can
see in this 5-kilometre square area inside Hebron,"
Shaul tells IPS, standing in the middle of an open
space that was once a lively meat market but is now
completely destroyed and abandoned, with garbage and
twisted metal littering the ground.
"It's all here. This is a microcosm of what's happening in
Israel-Palestine ... here, 650 settlers run the
town, and 150,000 Palestinians pay the price. There
is a policy here, and I know because it was told to
me, and I was expected to pass it on to my unit,
that we are not to interfere against the settlers."
Palestinians living in this area have been attacked and
harassed for years. Many families have left the area
after years of torment, and the rain of garbage,
faeces, oil, car batteries, used diapers, old
furniture and large rocks thrown onto their homes
and through their windows.
Palestinian children have been the target of serious physical
attacks in recent years. International human rights
workers have stationed themselves near the
elementary school specifically to escort children to
and from school during the day.
Last week Efrat Akobi, a settler in Tel Rumeida, was
questioned by the Israeli police after B'Tselem, an
Israeli human rights group, released film footage
where Akobi was seen verbally harassing a teenaged
member of a Palestinian family in the neighborhood.
In the footage, Akobi taunts the young girl, telling
her to "get back in your cage", while hurling
insults at her.
Israeli Defence Minister Amir Peretz said he was "shocked" by
the footage and announced he would ask for a full
investigation. But Palestinians in Hebron say this
is not an isolated incident, and that many more
shocking incidents come daily in this small area.
B'Tselem said in a statement published last week: "The
attacks in Hebron are carried out in full view of
Israeli soldiers, who are unable or unwilling to
stop them. The Hebron police, who receive hundreds
of complaints about settler violence, are also well
aware of the situation."
The statement added: "The fact that the Defence Minister and
the security establishment feign ignorance and
mobilise to respond to the problem only following
the public controversy generated by this video is
outrageous."
Meanwhile, as press coverage waxes and wanes, Hani Abu Akker
recalls something that happened almost two years
ago, that he says still keeps him up at night.
"My father at the time was very sick. We negotiated (with the
Israeli military) for the ambulance to come to our
house. It took over 48 hours for the ambulance to
pass. My father went to the hospital, and slipped
into a coma. My father told me two weeks before that
he wanted to die in his house and that I should make
arrangements when it was time.
"After a few weeks, the doctor said my father should go back
to the house to die according to his wishes. After
another two days of negotiations with the Israeli
military, they let us pass to our home. My father
eventually passed away.
"When my father's body was transferred to the ambulance, the
settlers made a circle and surrounded it. They began
dancing and throwing sweets and candies at the
ambulance. They cheered, 'Your old man is dead. We
hope all of you will be dead too.'
"I saw an Israeli soldier standing alone, tears
streaming down his face. He was sad and frustrated
that he could not stop this from happening. I
realised that I was not the only one bothered by
this. Even the soldiers that are here to protect the
settlers could not believe what was happening.
"Before this happened, I tried to make contact with the
Israeli settlers; to talk with them, to say that we
should try peace -- we live in the same
neighbourhood, so we should live together and live
our lives in peace. But instead, on that day, I
understood that they came not just to live here but
they came to move the Palestinians from their
neighbourhoods; to remove them without discussion."
Two years on, all that has not changed in Hebron.
All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service (2007).
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