Abu Dis, Container (Wadi Nar), Mon 21.4.08, Afternoon
15:09 Suddenly another BP man comes out raises his weapon and shouts: "Ambush, Attack, Fire! Fire! Fire!" Two more BP men join him, one of them is the BPman who has just until now wave the drivers to go through the checkpoint. The traffic stops. The BP men exercise an ambush. They kneel, advance while running stoop and shouting all the while "fire, fire, fire". We and the Palestinians in the front cars watch the surreal happenings. In the meanwhile there come, one after the other, about 20 cars.
15:14 The traffic is flowing again.
15:40 The passengers of the taxi going towards Beit Lehem 10 minutes ago get their documents back and can keep going on their way. Ten minutes are, indeed, not such a long time today (as we will find out later on), but in the blazing sun (it is 29 degrees in the shade, but who stands in the shade? what happens to those who dare doing it we will see) every minute is almost like eternity.
More taxis are being detained (we can't follow the times anymore, there are so many detained cars on both directions). At the entrance to the checkpoint, going to Beit Lehem, there are about 25 cars, and each has to stop for "a short talk" with the BP man, and for checkup of documents
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15:44 BP man "fire, fire, fire"has disappeared, and insteat emerges the waving BP man. Suddenly the traffic is flowing again, and about 20 cars, including many taxis, go through without any of them being stopped or detained.
15:45 The traffic coming from Beit Lehem is flowing. There are about 25 cars waiting to drive towards Beit Lehem. There is no BP man in sight. The Palestinian drivers are waiting patiently. In most of the cars the windows are open. It is hot.
15:49 A BP man signals the drivers to go on. Every truck driver has to stop, get off, and open the back of the truck, a procedure that delays the traffic'of course.
15:55 Another taxi coming from Beit Lehem is being detained. The driver does not stop at the side of the road, but drives 5 meters further and stops at the other side of the road, in the shade. The passengers, among them a very old couple, get out of the taxi. Daniela comments: "He, at least, has some sense." But very quickly we find out that our sense is not so clear. A BP man wearing a black yarmulka approaches them and starts shouting at the driver: "What happens here? you try to make here a whore house? everyone will do whatever he wants?" As Daniela dictates to me his words he talks less loudly, collects all the documents, and tells the driver to move the car and park it nearer to the checkpoint, in the sun. All the passengers sit in the taxi, again, in the blazing sun, 29 degrees in the shade, that the Palestinians are forbidden to enjoy.
16:00 We call the humanitarian center and report the many delays since this shift has begun.
16:08 The waving BP man appears again and the traffic starts flowing. He stops a big car and takes the documents of the passengers to check, and then he is back into waving and the traffic is back into flowing. 23 cars, among them taxis and trucks go through subsequently.
16:15 A truck full of goats arrives at the checkpoint. The BP man stops it, goes to the back and tries to look between the legs of the goats if there is something else on the truck apart from the goats, and he pats one of the goats.
For over 40 minutes there was a huge line of cars there because somebody thought that it is his job to check every document and document.
It needs to be reminded: in this checkpoint they check people who come from area B into area A.
16:25 After having waited for half an hour in the sun the passengers of the taxi whose driver had the guts to stand in the shade are allowed to keep on driving.
We enter the grocery store near the checkpoint. "Nu" moans an old customer when he sees us "when will they open the road here? you should talk and do something that we will be able to drive in a car. Until when shall we take everything on donkeys?"
16:27 While I was writing down the words of the old man (about two minutes) BP man "fire, fire, fire" stands in the checkpoint, and instead of waving on the cars like his friend (when we entered the grocery store the checkpoint was empty) he stops and checks every car, and within these two minutes there is again a line of about 25 cars.
Abu Dis / Lazarus gate (formerly The Wicket)
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Abu Dis / Lazarus Checkpoint/Gate (east of the former “wicket”)
Construction of the wall in the Abu Dis area blocked all the gaps that allowed people to cross from al-Ezariya to the neighbourhoods of Abu Dis and Ras al 'Amud that are located within Jerusalem’s municipal boundary. The Lazarus checkpoint is a gate in the wall adjacent to the Lazarus Monastery. Until 2011 it had a door for pilgrims to al-Ezariya and for the monastery’s kindergarten pupils from al-Ezariya. The crossing is currently closed, but the site has infrastructure for conducting inspections.
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Container (Wadi Nar)
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Wadi Nar Checkpoint ("Container", "The Kiosk") - a barrier for vehicles in Area B that is regularly manned - east of Abu Dis between Sawahra A Sharqiya and Bethlehem and its daughters. Controls Palestinian movement between the north and south West-Bank. Includes driving routes, access roads, spikes, traffic lights and signs. There is no pedestrian crossing. Open 24 hours a day with random checks enhanced on security alerts. The checkpoint is in Palestinian territory, allowing for separation between the north and the south Palestinian areas when necessary.
In 2015, the leading road from Azaria to Bethlehem was renovated, as well as the steep and narrow ascent to the Wadi Nar checkpoint, which was dangerously travelled in both directions! The temporary checkpoint was renovated and expanded, and pedestrian traffic was banned. From 2016, traffic travelling from the south bank to Azaria was directed to a one-way road near the Southern Keydar Jewish settlement.
Machsomwatch shifts visit this far-fetched checkpoint only occasionally.
(updated to July 2019)
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