‘Azzun ‘Atma, Bruqin, Deir Ballut, Haris, Kifl Harith, Qira
Qira, Kifl Haris, Highway 446, Highway 5 and the Barkan Industrial Zone’s sewage, ‘Azzun ‘Atma
We had two missions:
1. The weekly activity with the women and girls in Qira and a tour of the area.
2. Filming the activity in the Qira club and examining the alternatives for the ‘Azzun ‘Atma checkpoint.
10:00 Qira. As they do each Sunday, Sally-Ann and Michal meet the group of women for physical activity and art. This time there was also a group of girls on a break from school.
Sally-Ann engages the older women in movement and Michal begins with the girls making bowls from basic, inexpensive materials. Everyone is happy despite the difficult conditions: the roof leaks, part of the floor is flooded, there’s no electricity in the dark rooms – some without windows.
This time we collected money to “buy electricity” to provide light, at least during the activities. There’s no possibility of heat. Everyone’s wrapped in multiple layers of clothing.
——————
Sally-Ann’s report:
Today the entrance to Qira was blocked by army cars so we had to drive through Haris.
We did a nice dance/stretching class and Michal did art work with the children creating papier mache bowls which they will paint later.
Today Dvorka and Dalia came . They filmed and interviewed the children and women.
After leaving Qira we continued on Highway 5 to see what happens to the sewage from the Barkan wine factory.
There is a beautiful waterfall on the side of the road, but this waterfall is pure sewerage and chemicals.
If you open the window you smell it. It flows down the side of the road and under the bridge to a Palestinian village.
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Kifl Haris is blocked. On the way to Qira we drove via Kifl Haris. Right before the entrance to the village a soldier stopped us (from the Haruv unit) and announced that the road is closed because of infrastructure work by the army. We weren’t able to receive an answer from him regarding how long we’d have to wait (that’s probably the result of the army’s way of treating the Palestinians, whose time, of course, isn’t important).
The soldier on the road asked us where we were going, and when we said Qira he said we’re not allowed to enter the village because it’s Area A. The lieutenant was called over to help, went to find out something and came back with the same answer – it’s Area A, you can’t enter. It wasn’t clear to us whether it was ignorance or an additional Israeli trick to prevent any contact between Israelis and Palestinians. We retraced our steps and drove to Qira via Haris. On our way back we went east to the road leading back to the entrance to Kifl Haris. The same soldiers stood at the junction. We stopped next to them and suggested they check their maps and see that Qira, like all the other villages, is located in Area B.
12:00 Highway 446 from Highway 5 and Bruqin to Deir Balut.
After finishing at Qira we drove toward Bruqin, Kufr ad Dik, Alei Zahav and Fadu’el until the road to Deir Balut. In the past it had been possible to enter the village; in the past year a sign was erected also at the entrance to the road to Deir Balut declaring it to be Area A – forbidden to Israelis (who aren’t Palestinian citizens of Israel).
Construction continues on the ridges along both sides of Highway 446. Leshem is expanding on the Alei Zahav ridge, and on the slopes of Fadu’el’s ridge more and more buildings are under construction.
12:45 On Highway 5 the sewage from the Barkan Industrial Zone is flowing heavily to the channel under the highway which brings it right to the village of Bruqin; that used to be the ‘Azzun ‘Atma checkpoint. We also drove along the decorative wall leading directly to Sha’arei Tiqwa which bypasses and completely conceals the entrance and the checkpoint that used to be there.
As has already been said, the Palestinians who work in Israel will have to spend more hours each day to reach the Eyal checkpoint and from there on Highway 444, in Israel, to reach their jobs in the seam zone.
We were told that landowners in the area will receive a special permit to cross directly through an agricultural gate. The permits will be individual, by name.Qira, Kifl Haris, Highway 446, Highway 5 and the Barkan Industrial Zone’s sewage, ‘Azzun ‘Atma, 19.1.15, morning
Observers: Sally-Ann, Michal R. (photographing), Dalya G., Dvorka A. (reporting), Nadim (driving)
Translator: Charles K.
We had two missions:
1. The weekly activity with the women and girls in Qira and a tour of the area.
2. Filming the activity in the Qira club and examining the alternatives for the ‘Azzun ‘Atma checkpoint.
10:00 Qira. As they do each Sunday, Sally-Ann and Michal meet the group of women for physical activity and art. This time there was also a group of girls on a break from school.
Sally-Ann engages the older women in movement and Michal begins with the girls making bowls from basic, inexpensive materials. Everyone is happy despite the difficult conditions: the roof leaks, part of the floor is flooded, there’s no electricity in the dark rooms – some without windows.
This time we collected money to “buy electricity” to provide light, at least during the activities. There’s no possibility of heat. Everyone’s wrapped in multiple layers of clothing.
——————
Sally-Ann’s report:
Today the entrance to Qira was blocked by army cars so we had to drive through Haris.
We did a nice dance/stretching class and Michal did art work with the children creating papier mache bowls which they will paint later.
Today Dvorka and Dalia came . They filmed and interviewed the children and women.
After leaving Qira we continued on Highway 5 to see what happens to the sewage from the Barkan wine factory.
There is a beautiful waterfall on the side of the road, but this waterfall is pure sewerage and chemicals.
If you open the window you smell it. It flows down the side of the road and under the bridge to a Palestinian village.
——————-
Kifl Haris is blocked. On the way to Qira we drove via Kifl Haris. Right before the entrance to the village a soldier stopped us (from the Haruv unit) and announced that the road is closed because of infrastructure work by the army. We weren’t able to receive an answer from him regarding how long we’d have to wait (that’s probably the result of the army’s way of treating the Palestinians, whose time, of course, isn’t important).
The soldier on the road asked us where we were going, and when we said Qira he said we’re not allowed to enter the village because it’s Area A. The lieutenant was called over to help, went to find out something and came back with the same answer – it’s Area A, you can’t enter. It wasn’t clear to us whether it was ignorance or an additional Israeli trick to prevent any contact between Israelis and Palestinians. We retraced our steps and drove to Qira via Haris. On our way back we went east to the road leading back to the entrance to Kifl Haris. The same soldiers stood at the junction. We stopped next to them and suggested they check their maps and see that Qira, like all the other villages, is located in Area B.
12:00 Highway 446 from Highway 5 and Bruqin to Deir Balut.
After finishing at Qira we drove toward Bruqin, Kufr ad Dik, Alei Zahav and Fadu’el until the road to Deir Balut. In the past it had been possible to enter the village; in the past year a sign was erected also at the entrance to the road to Deir Balut declaring it to be Area A – forbidden to Israelis (who aren’t Palestinian citizens of Israel).
Construction continues on the ridges along both sides of Highway 446. Leshem is expanding on the Alei Zahav ridge, and on the slopes of Fadu’el’s ridge more and more buildings are under construction.
12:45 On Highway 5 the sewage from the Barkan Industrial Zone is flowing heavily to the channel under the highway which brings it right to the village of Bruqin; that used to be the ‘Azzun ‘Atma checkpoint. We also drove along the decorative wall leading directly to Sha’arei Tiqwa which bypasses and completely conceals the entrance and the checkpoint that used to be there.
As has already been said, the Palestinians who work in Israel will have to spend more hours each day to reach the Eyal checkpoint and from there on Highway 444, in Israel, to reach their jobs in the seam zone.
We were told that landowners in the area will receive a special permit to cross directly through an agricultural gate. The permits will be individual, by name.
'Azzun 'Atma
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'Azzun 'Atma
A Palestinian village of about 1,800 residents. The settlement of Sha'arei Tikva was established on its land adjacent to it, and the settlement of Oranit was established on its agricultural lands. By 2013, the separation fence had passed through the village and a checkpoint staffed by the army allowed the residents to cross from side to side. After building a massive wall surrounding the village and some of its agricultural lands, the residents went daily for five years to their lands that remained in the Seam Zone through the Oranit agricultural checkpoint (4). Since 2018 it has only opened during the olive harvest and the farmers have to pass daily at the Beit Amin / Abu Salman checkpoint (1447), about 3 kilometers north.From a report from March 24, 2021: "The farmers from Beit Amin and Azon Atma are happy that since February 21 the Oranit checkpoint .is going to be open 3 times a day, The farmers are really developing the place."
Report from July 14, 2024: "Ornit checkpoint is closed . The Beit Amin/Abu Salman agricultural checkpoint is closed (there is no contact with the military to check if it opens rarely), the Ezbat Jaloud checkpoint was opened once a day before the war.
Updated for July 2024
Apr-11-2019Azoun: The main entrance to village blocked now for several weeks
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Bruqin
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Bruqin is a village of about 4,000 residents in Salfit County. 600 dunams of the village's land were expropriated in 1984 for the establishment of the Barkan industrial zone. Small sewage treatment plant This area is regularly flooded. The sewage flows into Baruchin and pollutes the streets of the village. In 1999, the Bruchin settlement was established. The barrier of separation and harassment Settlers keep the villagers away from 30% of their lands (about 4,000 dunams). About half of the village lands are in Area C, on which Israel prevents construction.
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Deir Ballut
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An internal checkpoint on Road 446 at the entrance to the village of Deir Ballut and near the settlements there, Alei Zahav and Peduel. Partially staffed, vehicles are inspected at random.
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Haris
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Haris
The village has 4,500 people and they have 5,000 dunams of land. The entrance to the village is blocked and opened arbitrarily, without informing the residents.The village has a seasonal checkpoint that blocks the road to the agricultural land and this checkpoint opens once a year! 2,500-3,000 dunams were stolen from the village in order to build the settlements of Revava and Netafim, which are located west of Haris.
The center of the village is Area B and around Area C. The population grows but the occupation does not permit new construction in Area C.
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Kifl Harith
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Kifl Harith
This is a Palestinian located north-west of the settler-colony town of Ariel, 18 kilometers south of the city of Nablus. It numbers 3, 206 inhabitants, as of 2007. 42% of the village lands lie in Area B, and 58% in Area C. In 1978, some hundreds of dunams of the village’s farmland was sequestered in order to found the settler-colony of Ariel – in total 5,184 dunams from the Palestinian communities of Salfit, Iscaqa, Marda, and Kifl Harith. Dozens of square kilometers were also confiscated for paving road no. 5 as well as road 505 and their buffer zones, and the Israeli electricity company’s power station. Over the years the village has suffered harassment by sometimes-armed settler-colonists, even casualties. In 1968 the army’s rabbinate ruled the maqam site Nabi Yanoun (sanctified grave of the Prophet Yanoun) is in fact the tomb of Joshua, Son of Nun. Another structure in the village, named Nabi Tul Kifl by the Palestinians, has been identified by the Israeli authorities as to the tomb of Caleb, Son of Yefuneh. These sites are located in the heart of the village, near the mosque, and at times of Jewish religious festivities and pilgrimages, the center of the village is illuminated by projectors and thousands of Jews arrive, protected by hundreds of Israeli soldiers. During such a period, a night curfew is imposed on the village and the villagers are forced to stay shut inside their homes.
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Qira
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Qira
This village is located in the Salfit district of the northern West Bank, 19 kilometers south-west of Nablus. The village population numbered 1,387 as of 2016. 97.6% of the village lands are categorized as Area B, whereas the 2.3% remaining are in Area C. The Separation Fence erected around the settler-colony city of Ariel separates Qira from its local town Salfit, and necessitates a detour of about 20 kilometers.
In 2010-2015, the women’s center in the village held meetings and workshops shared by the village women and children with members of MachsomWatch.
For further information: http://vprofile.arij.org/salfit/pdfs/vprofile/Qira_vp_en.pdf
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