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‘Anata, Beit Iba, Thu 27.12.07, Afternoon

Observers: Avital C., Yehudiet L. Natanya translating
Dec-27-2007
| Afternoon

 Beit Iba. 14.21  Checkpoint of Jit…unmanned.

14.30 Beit Iba. No pressure and few people.  As soon as we arrived 5 men were freed from the enclosure. But it is a strange process. First they pass in the direction of the new rooms of the checkpoint area of the cars and then they get into a jeep which has an Israeli license number  and is going in the direction of Nablus.  A soldier gets to the car and speaks  (You? Telephone? Communication device?)….we cannot see who he is talking to. They get out of the car and stand and wait on the other side of the road. Afterwards they can go to the checking area of the pedestrians and then they get their IDs back. Again they cross the road in the direction of Kuchin and drive off in the direction of Nablus.

From the little we could find out it seems that they are municipal workers from Nablus who tried to exit in the morning  to their work at Sarra through Beit Iba and were not allowed to do so.  So they went through Hawarra. On their way back they were stopped and were held for 4 hours.

The X-ray machine is not working  and the commander says that it suddenly stopped.  Most of the pedestrians go past in a by lane which we can sometimes see on the side of the turnstile. Most of the time there are few people. A man comes up to us and asks how he can get a magnetic card.  We gave him Silvia's phone number. He said that in 1992 he had been in jail in Israel and once a doctor by the name of Ruchama M.  helped him  when he lost consciousness because of having  been beaten. He got her number from 144 . Today he is an accountancy teacher and lives in Anabta. He invites us to visit and we say one day we will.

  • Beit Iba

    See all reports for this place
    • A perimeter checkpoint west of the city of Nablus. Operated from 2001 to 2009 as one of the four permanent checkpoints closing on Nablus: Beit Furik and Awarta to the east and Hawara to the south. A pedestrian-only checkpoint, where MachsomWatch volunteers were present daily for several hours in the morning and afternoon to document the thousands of Palestinians waiting for hours in long queues with no shelter in the heat or rain, to leave the district city for anywhere else in the West Bank. From March 2009, as part of the easing of the Palestinian movement in the West Bank, it was abolished, without a trace, and without any adverse change in the security situation.  
      Beit-Iba checkpoint 22.04.04
      Jun-4-2014
      Beit-Iba checkpoint 22.04.04
  • Checkpoint Shu'afat camp / Anata-Shu'afat (Jerusalem)

    See all reports for this place
    • The Shu’afat checkpoint is located in the northern part of East Jerusalem at the exit from the village of Anata and the Shu’afat refugee camp, which are located in the area annexed to Jerusalem in 1967. The refugee camp borders the Shu’afat neighborhood to the west, Pisgat Ze’ev to the north, the French Hill neighborhood to the south and the planned expansion of Ma’aleh Adumim to E-1 in the east.  It was established in 1966 for 1948 refugees from the West Bank and was populated after the Six Day War by persons who had been expelled from the Jewish Quarter.  Today its population comprises some 25,000 people holding blue ID cards and some 15,000 people with Palestinian ID cards.  The camp lacks adequate infrastructure and services, and suffers from poverty, neglect and overcrowding.  All its buildings are connected to the public electricity and water infrastructure, but not all are connected to the sewer system.  The camp’s services are provided by UNRWA, except for those such as health clinics and transportation of pupils to schools in Jerusalem.  In 2005, the Israeli High Court of Justice rejected a suit by the residents requesting that the route of the separation fence be drawn such that the camp would remain on the Israeli side, but conditioned its approval of the route on the establishment of a convenient and rapid crossing facility for the inhabitants of the neighborhood, most of whom are residents of Jerusalem.

      A temporary checkpoint operated there until December, 2011.  It was extremely congested during rush hours, and dangerous for pedestrians (especially children) because of inadequate safety provisions.  The new checkpoint was  inaugurated south of the old one, for public and private transportation and for pedestrians, intended solely for the residents of the camp – holders of blue ID cards, and those with Palestinian ID cards who possess appropriate permits.  There are five vehicle inspection stations at the checkpoint, and two for pedestrians (one of which is currently closed) where scanners have been installed but are not yet operating.  According to the army, representatives of government agencies will also be present to provide services to residents of the neighbourhood.  The pedestrian lanes are very long, located far from the small parking lots, and accessible through only a single revolving gate.

       

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