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A visit to two villages, Azzun and Burin. Sunday 18/11/2012

Observers: Rahel A., Tzvia S. (reporting)
Nov-18-2012
| Morning
We visited two villages on the west bank, at first heading towards Azzun. The route  was quiet, as was Azzun too. We visited B., who opened a second-hand shop on the road to Thulth. He told us that on the previous Thursday there was army activity in his village with soldiers conducting searches for suspects. His brother's apartment (in the same house as his) was searched, causing much damage and finally detaining his nephew. They still don't know where he is. As usual, the cause must be that someone from their village informed on him – that he threw stones. B's kids- bearing the memories of five months back – wet their beds through the night.
Exiting Azzun at around 16:00, we saw a military vehicle (an "Abir") parking across from the entrance to the village. There were five soldiers there and we resolved to talk to them on our way back. We then headed for Burin via Jit and Highway 60, encountering military vehicles all along. We spoke with G., as we had intended to purchase ten bottles of olive oil from him. He dissuaded us from entering his village as there were many demonstrators and soldiers around. We decided to meet him on road 60 above the village. There he hurriedly told us that the soldiers were detaining every Palestinian daring to stand on the road, so he handed us the oil and was right off. He deterred us from driving to Huwarra, which we were intending to do, as there were riots there, with stone-throwing, gas, etc.
We returned to Road 55, again noting the large number of military vehicles along the roads. The "Abir" at Azzun was still there with four of the soldiers holding their guns in position. They asked us who we were and Machsomwatch was unfamiliar to them. But then one of them recalled that when they were instructed for their jobs, an officer had mentioned MW as a woman's group "spying" after the military and reporting to the Palestinians on the whereabouts of the army on their internet site . Beware of them! We asked them if they ever checked out our site. "No. Why should we?" "Aren't you curious?" we asked. They then told us that they were shown a film about a young Palestinian youth at Huwarra CP –  all wired up, with 100 IS in his pocket – his pay from the terrorists. And how lucky that the soldiers caught him in advance. The soldier  said he was from Kibbutz Kefar Ruppin and had graduated from TA University in Computor Engineering.
We went on to remark: "and do you believe everything you're told"? "Yes, if its by our commander or on TV, we believe!" "Weren't you ever told to check out things for yourself? we asked. No, they smiled, "we're not interested!"
At Eliyahu CP we were asked where we came from. Guess what our reply was…

  • 'Azzun

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    • Azoun (updated February 2019)

      A Palestinian town situated in Area B (under civil Palestinian control and Israeli security control), 

      on road 5 between Nablus and Qalqiliya, east of Nabi Elias village. The inhabitants are allowed to construct and improve infrastructures. The Separation Fence has confiscated lands belonging to the town's people. In 2018 olive tree groves owned by one of its inhabitants were confiscated for the sake of paving a road to bypass Nabi Elias. Azoun population numbers 13,000, its economic state dire. Its infrastructures are poor, neglect and poverty rampant. In the meantime, the town council has completed paving an internal road for the inhabitants' welfare.

      Because of its proximity to the Jewish settler-colony of Karnei Shomron and its outposts, the town suffers the intense presence of the Israeli army, especially at nighttime: soldiers enter homes, arrest suspects, trash the house and sometimes ruin it, as they do in numerous places in the West Bank. At times a checkpoint closes the entrance to the town, so no one can come in or get out.

       

  • Burin (Yitzhar)

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    • Burin (Yitzhar)

      This is a Palestinian village in the Nablus governorate, a little south of Nablus, on the main road passing through the West Bank. The settlements: Yitzhar and Har Bracha, settled in locations that surrounded the village, placed fences so it is cut off the main road.

      There are around 4000 inhabitants. Most of them are engaged in agriculture and pasture, although many graduates of the two secondary schools continue to study at the university. Academic positions are hardly available, they find work as builderd, or leave for the Gulf countries.

      The village lands were appropriated several times for the establishment of Israeli settlements and military bases, and as a result, Burin's land and water resources dwindled. lSince 1982, more than 2,000 dunams of village land have been declared "state land" and then transferred to Har Bracha settlement.

      Over the past few years and more so since 2017, the villagers have been terrorized by the residents of Yitzhar and Har Bracha, the Givat Ronen outpost and others. Despite the close proximity of soldiers to an IDF base close to one of the village's schools, residents are suffering from numerous stone-throwing events, vehicle and fire arson, also reported in the press.

      In 2023, the prevention of the olive harvest in the village plot was more violent than ever. Soldiers and settlers walked with drawn weapons between the houses of the village and demanded that people stop harvesting in the village itself and in the private plots outside the village. The settlers from Yitzhar and Giv'at Roned raided the olive groves and stole crops. 300 olive trees belonging to the residents of Burin, near Yitzhar, were uprooted. The loss of livelihood from the olives causes long-term economic damage to the farmers' families, bringing them to the point of starvation.

      (updated for November 2023)

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