‘Anabta, Ar-Ras, Jubara (Kafriat), Qalqiliya, Wed 17.9.08, Morning
Qalqiliya (Eliyahu Passage)
06:55 – Construction workers who work in Alfe Menashe are waiting for the inspection beyond the fence, as usual. Today an officer of the military police has opened another inspection post, and therefore about 150 people have managed to pass so far. The inspection started at 05:00. The workers say that in the last days the inspections have been carried out at reasonable pace.
There is a line of more than 10 settlers' cars, leaving for work in Israel.
Qalqiliya checkpoint
07:05 – No lines in either side. We don't stay.
Anabta (Einav)
09:50 – When we get closer, we see a minibus beside the road and all passengers, who have been told to get out, stand there waiting for the inspection. In the meantime there is already a line of 12 cars that have come from the direction of Tulakrm. As we arrive, they are sent to go on their way. The following cars pass quickly. Some 5 cars pass and then a taxi is stopped and the passengers are asked to get out. A minute later they can get back in. in other words, the checks are random.
10:00 – Only 2 cars are in line.
While this is what is going on at the exit from Tulkarm, at the entrance the soldier just lifts a finger and the cars pass. He stops Israeli cars when he thinks the passengers are Jewish and talks to them, maybe warning them. As a matter of fact, a car with Jewish passengers does arrive here by mistake. They have thought it is the way to road 6.
All the time we see only 2 soldiers, one in each direction. At the entrance to the pillbox there is a pile of food portions on closed, disposable plates. We wonder if they have no time to eat but they say it is from a long time ago. Another soldier appears and one of the two soldiers can go to the rest room.
10:05 – The checkpoint is empty. Few cars pass.
10:10 – We leave.
Ar-Ras checkpoint (Farm 8)
10:25 – On both sides there are no vehicles.
Agricultural Workers Gate 753 (southern entrance to Jubara)
10:30 – A tractor with an empty trailer has been waiting for over 5 minutes. Standard practice at this checkpoint involves writing down the ID card details of the entering people (except for Jubara residents); to make sure they come back the same day. This is the first thing the soldiers do and then the tractor is checked. The Advanced Command Post is consulted over the phone and the driver is questioned ("Is all this for personal use?" What, the tractor?). Eventually they let him pass.
Two youths with the right permits come back from the direction of the village. Their personal details are checked in a notebook and then erased.
A pick-up truck with a permit is at the entrance to the village. Two large bags of clothes are on it. Another consultation over the phone and since the bags of clothes don't look as if they are for personal use, the pick-up truck is sent back.
A man without a permit arrives holding a few small bags. They are all opened and checked. What he brings along is pitas, rolls and also some clothes. The soldiers rebuke him asking why he buys food in Taiyiba when it's cheaper in Tulkarm. When the inspection is over, he continues on his way.
A Jubara resident whose wife is an Israeli citizen complains that sometimes she is sent to pass through the Figs Passage. He turns to an officer at the DCO [District Coordination Office of the IDF Civil Administration that handles passage permits] and he promises him to take care of it. The soldier explains to him the (guiding) rationale of the Israeli bureaucracy (which is, in the territories the main tool of oppression): "You see, it is actually an entrance to Israel, but only for Palestinians with a permit".
'Anabta CP
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'Anabta CP
The checkpoint is located south of the village of 'Anabta, at the intersection of Road 60 (leading to Nablus at the entrance to Area A), with Road (57, 557, 5576) facing west towards the Einav settlement and the checkpoint at the exit from the West Bank - Figs checkpoint. Until 2010 we used to watch the intersection and report the long columns created due to a slow inspection of the vehicles in both directions.
Oct-28-2011Anabta checkpoint 24.10.11
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A-Ras (The Children Checkpoint)
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A-Ras (The Children Checkpoint)
On Tulkarm-Qalqiliya road (574), east of Hirbet Jubara. tia checkpoint is dedicated to residents traveling to and from Tulkarm, so they should not cross apartheid road 557 (only permissible for settlers).
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Jubara (Kafriat)
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The Jabra checkpoint was on Road 557, south of Tulkarm, on the side of the Figs Pass, which is located within the Palestinian Authority (a few kilometers east of the Green Line), and serves as an entry barrier from the territories to Israel. The checkpoint to the village of Jubara, which until 2013 was in the seam area, blocked and surrounded by a fence, was intended for the passage of the family members of the house next to the checkpoint, and also for the MachsomWatch volunteers (with special permission only), on their way to checkpoint 753. on the other side of the village. The soldiers supervising the "fig crossing" also supervised the crossing at this checkpoint, in our shifts we often waited a long time until the key was found and the gate opened. The checkpoint was abolished and became part of the separation fence that was moved west following the High Court.
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Qalqiliya checkpoint
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Qalqilya is surrounded on all sides by the separation barrier. The only exit from the city is in the east of the city on the road that leaves the city in an easterly direction. This is where the checkpoint was located. When the checkpoint was active until 2009 our shifts watched long queues of cars being inspected at the only exit from the city to the West Bank. The checkpoint was canceled, but there is a military presence at the entrance to the city.
Nina SebaAug-18-2025Azzun: Enclosed by a high fence and the gate to the village is closed
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