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‘Azzun ‘Atma, Jubara (Kafriat), Tue 7.5.13, Morning

Observers: Shoshi A., Liora G. B., Shirit H., Ilana R. and Karin L. (reporting)
May-07-2013
| Morning

 

A meeting at Kafr Sur with the intention of gathering information about Palestinians who are regularly unable to reach their plots in the junction area, in order to cultivate them. Jabara after the fence which separated the village from the West Bank was removed. The new fence at Azoun Atma.

 

10:50 Eliyahu Gate CP

There are few cars in both directions, no delays.

 

11:20 Kafr Sur

G. hosted us in his house. According to him the main problem of the village inhabitants is that of the permits. Not all the inhabitants succeed in getting permits to pass through the agricultural gates in order to reach their plots which are beyond the separation fence. There is no physical impediment to reach the plots, even the plots beyond Sal'it, but there are still families where only the elderly parents, who have difficulty working, get the permits, but not their sons.

   New Gate

 

 

 

The Sal'it gate is opened twice a days (in the morning and in the afternoon) for half an hour. He himself also has an authorization to pass through the Jabara CP, which remained open the whole day, and from there he passed to his plots which were near the gate in the Jabara fence. This gate was closed when the Jabara CP was dismantled. There is a new gate (804) which hasn't been opened yet and nobody knows when this will happen.  

12:20 We continue northwards on the road to Tul Karem. We pass A-Ras, the T junction with the road that leads to Tul Karem under road 557, where there used to be a CP and where we used to make our observations. We reach the junction with the System Road, where – till last week – there was the CP which separated the village from the rest of the bank. We stopped for photographs. Two soldiers who stood at the  junction came up to us and asked us what we were doing. We said that we were on our way to the village and they explained that they still had about two weeks' work before the CP would be finally dismantled.

 

 

 Jubara  

 

13:00 Jabara

We tried to contact A. in order to hear about the significance of the removal of the fence for the entire village – but to no avail.

 

 We reached the house of Abu Hatam and the double gate in the separation fence. After a few photographs two military policemen came up on the other side and asked us how we got there and asked us not to take photographs. On the way back through the village the grocery was still closed. We were told that everybody was a the prayer in the (new?) mosque.

We returned via the same route we came on, Azoun and the Eliyahu Gate. There were no delays.

 

14:15 Azoun Atma

On the road, from the Oranit junction on, a larger number than usual of army vehicles passed. We met some near the CP. They brought food for the soldiers. No Palestinians passed while we stayed there. Two of the soldiers identified us from the encounter with the officers at Habla. According to them the new fence was due to replace the existing one which has too many loopholes. It is now being built according to the regular standard of a separation obstacle, with a system roads and fences on both sides. According to his estimate it will take some months to finish the fence.

 

According to him there is no intention to include the buildings of Azoun Atma which are situated to the south of the road leading to the settlements of Sha'arey Tiquva and Elkana or the road itself in the area of the village or the Bank. He was unable to reply to our question what the meaning of the earthworks, which look like a preparation for a road south of the southern part of the village, was.

 

 

 

 

 

  • 'Azzun 'Atma

    See all reports for this place
    • 'Azzun 'Atma
      A Palestinian village of about 1,800 residents. The settlement of Sha'arei Tikva was established on its land adjacent to it, and the settlement of Oranit was established on its agricultural lands. By 2013, the separation fence had passed through the village and a checkpoint staffed by the army allowed the residents to cross from side to side. After building a massive wall surrounding the village and some of its agricultural lands, the residents went daily for five years to their lands that remained in the Seam Zone through the Oranit agricultural checkpoint (4). Since 2018 it has only  opened during the olive harvest and the farmers have to pass daily at the Beit Amin / Abu Salman checkpoint (1447), about 3 kilometers north.

      From a report from March 24, 2021: "The farmers from Beit Amin and Azon Atma are happy that since February 21 the Oranit checkpoint .is going to be open 3 times a day, The farmers are really developing the place."

      Report from July 14, 2024: "Ornit checkpoint is closed . The Beit Amin/Abu Salman agricultural checkpoint is closed (there is no contact with the military to check if it opens rarely), the Ezbat Jaloud checkpoint was opened once a day before the war.

      Updated for July 2024

       

      עזון: הכניסה הראשית לכפר עזון: חסומה כבר מספר שבועות
      Apr-11-2019
      Azoun: The main entrance to village blocked now for several weeks
  • 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.  
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