Azzun, Beit Iba, Wed 19.3.08, Afternoon
14.25 Azzun is closed with barbed wire and dirt mounds and also iron rounds. The village of Jit is open and the checkpoint not manned.
14.55 Beit Iba.
Two red signs are in front of the checkpoint, one far away and the other very near. Both have area A which is the sign of the Palestnian authority erased but all the lying text has been left. "The area in front of you, area A. is that of the Palestinian authority and Israelis may not enter and anyone doing so transgresses the law." It is true that this is a Palestinian area but it is still under Israeli control and Israelis pass here freely and the checkpoint itself is under the control of the Israeli army with Israeli soldiers manning it. We see these signs at all the checkpoints which we go to. (I would think that this is a matter for a lawyer). The entrance to Nablus has only 9 cars waiting. At the exit the line is so long that we cannot see the end of it. The humanitarian line streams through and the checking is short. In the shed there is no crowding, about 50 people at each checking area. Here the checking is very careful and the people strip sometimes including shoes. They come outside and then get dressed. There are 4 detainees who had tried to slip through. Tomer from the DCO does his best to help and the fact that the humanitarian line is so fast is thanks to him. He says that two of the detainees will soon be freed and the other two in two hours time. From time to time a bus goes through with children on a trip and is quickly checked. The soldiers enter the bus, check IDs and send them on. 15.35 Two more detainees who tried to slip through. We met a volunteer from Norway who asked us about the massive building of the checkpoint. They say that when they were last year this had not been so. We said that maybe then it had not been thought that the checkpoint would be there for eternity. Tammie asks Tomer to check why the detainees are not freed and he says that 2 will be freed at 16.15 and the other two at 17.00. The commander has shortened the time they have to be there. 16.00 3 soldiers come happily to the checkpoint with 3 who had tried to slip through.
16.15 The line exiting Nablus has no end. There is a change in shift. Reservists. The commander is stricter. Those coming out of the checking area have to get dressed outside which means that they have to walk in their socks on the filthy ground outside. Why? Because. Tammie asks the previous commander to see that the detainees are freed before the shifts are changed. He frees the two as promised and we meet their friend who did not slip through and is waiting for them….he has waited 15 minutes. Tammie explains to them that it is not worth their while to try to slip through.
16.45 We leave for Anabta and A-Ras
'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.
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Beit Iba
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A perimeter checkpoint west of the city of Nablus. Operated from 2001 to 2009 as one of the four permanent checkpoints closing on Nablus: Beit Furik and Awarta to the east and Hawara to the south. A pedestrian-only checkpoint, where MachsomWatch volunteers were present daily for several hours in the morning and afternoon to document the thousands of Palestinians waiting for hours in long queues with no shelter in the heat or rain, to leave the district city for anywhere else in the West Bank. From March 2009, as part of the easing of the Palestinian movement in the West Bank, it was abolished, without a trace, and without any adverse change in the security situation.
Jun-4-2014Beit-Iba checkpoint 22.04.04
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