‘Anabta, ‘Azzun, Jubara (Kafriat), Qalqiliya, Tue 24.3.09, Afternoon
Translation: Bracha B.A.
Jubara
14:30 Soldiers at the children’s gate are bored. There is no traffic. They report that farmers pass through to work their fields. According to them, there is still a population of 300 people in the village. We look out towards what was previously the A-Ras Checkpoint. The soldiers tell us that tomorrow (March 25th) their checkpoint will also be closed.
All people coming and going from Jubara will pass through the “Te’enah” gate. Until then the soldiers are free to enjoy the view.
On our way back we saw a chair standing in the middle of the road and an old man standing next to it and signaled to us. We stopped and to our embarrassment we didn’t know how to speak to him in Arabic. He opened his mouth and showed us his rotten teeth and we thought that he wanted money. He refused to accept money and we then understood that he wanted a ride to the dentist. We decided that he was planning on going to Tul Karem. We drove him to the Anabta checkpoint and transferred him to a taxi.
Anabta
15:00 A long line of cars extends beyond the crossroads. The line begins to move quickly when no cars are stopped or checked. The traffic from the direction of Tul Karem is slower. Occasionally cars are checked at random. The longest lines are created when trucks or cars with goods are stopped. The emphasis is on checking goods.
Qalqilya Checkpoint “Hechaviyot” (The barrels)
15:20 There is an armored military vehicle standing at the entrance to road 60. The checkpoint stands further on in the direction of Beit Iba after passing to the right of a large wall of barrels. If they adhere to IDF tradition, it will become a large checkpoint in which millions of shekels are invested and will then be closed like Beit Iba.
There is no arrangement for pedestrians to pass through. Cars are randomly checked. The soldiers, two of whom introduce themselves as residents of Kiryat Shmonah, strongly believe in our ownership of the entire land for religious reasons. When we point out to them that there are other people living on the same land, they claim that the Palestinians are foreign invaders without any right to live here. They remind us gain and again about the massacre of the Jews in Hebron in 1929 but they don’t respond when we remind them about Baruch Goldstein.
Their attitude towards the Palestinians is extremely patronizing, and they scorn their way of life that is limited to working and sleeping. We tried to arouse some empathy regarding the daily life of a family man who has to get up at 3:00 AM in order to reach the Israeli border at 6:00 to find a job at hard physical labor for a meager salary and then stand in line at checkpoints on his way home. We called their attention to the source of power – the rifles that they hold – against the helplessness of the Palestinian who has to get to a doctor or even to visit family. They listened to us, but whether we made an impression or not we’ll never know. On the way west near Azun the main entrance to the city is still closed. The roadblock has become green and filled with flowers. The western entrance is open.
Qalqilya
16:15 – Taxi drivers in the parking lot told us there were two people being detained. We found two people handcuffed with their eyes covered. They were being held in the tent at the army base and we were not allowed to go in to see them or to speak to them.
The checkpoint commander told us that the two had arrived in a car, but when one of them was discovered to be on the wanted list he tried to run away. According to him, his soldiers arrested one of them and the police found the other. They have already been detained for an hour and the soldiers are waiting for instructions from the General Security Services.
We called the Liaison and Coordination Administration. They promised to check what was going on. ON our way back we called again and are given the same answer.
'Anabta CP
See all reports for this place-
'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
-
'Azzun
See all reports for this place-
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.
-
Jubara (Kafriat)
See all reports for this place-
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.
-
Qalqiliya checkpoint
See all reports for this place-
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
-