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Barta’a-Reihan, Tura-Shaked, Ya’bed-Dotan

Observers: Observers: Neta Golan, Shula Bar (reporting and photographing) Translator: Charles K.
Dec-05-2013
| Morning

06:05  A’anin checkpoint

The rain that fell throughout the area last night continues this morning and keeps many people home.  Only about a quarter of the usual number arrived at the checkpoint.  Before the separation fence was erected farmers would begin to sow and plant vegetables among the olive trees at the end of the harvest, to use the land and take advantage of the rains.  But now, when the occupier doesn’t allow them to reach their lands every day, they can no longer raise vegetable for their own use.  A resident of Araka, a Palestinian village southeast of A’anin, supports himself from temporary jobs he’s able to find in the seam zone.  He has a crossing permit for the A’anin checkpoint but asks us, again, to help him obtain a crossing permit for Barta’a.  Not only because he’ll be able to cross there for work more often than twice a week, but mainly because it costs him NIS 50 to go the 15 kilometers from Araka to the A’anin checkpoint (alone in a taxi because no one else travels that route), while the same distance to the Reihan checkpoint, in a jitney, is only NIS 10.  That’s a huge difference for someone who earns only NIS 100/day (and only twice a week)!  He’s not a young man; that’s the only work he’s been able to find to barely make a living.  Who’ll deal sympathetically with this case?  Others complain (again) about S., the DCO representative (an officer?), who’s rude to them.  Today people going through are registered on a cellphone, not a computer.  Let’s hope the list doesn’t disappear – otherwise, everyone crossing this morning will, when they return this afternoon, be considered to have been in Israel illegally and be punished.

 

06:55  Tura checkpoint

The soldiers arrived late; crossing begins only at 07:10.  People have begun coming through, but not vehicles, because the metal barriers inside this little checkpoint that are operated electrically are stuck.  They don’t rise.  The principal of the Yabed school, who’s afraid he’ll be late to work, turns his car around and drives away, angry, always angry, to the distant Barta’a checkpoint.  It was much easier to cross here before the checkpoint was crammed with a ridiculous number of installations and devices to control and limit movement through it.  The strike of teachers in the West Bank will continue until this coming Sunday because their salaries were delayed.  So today we can’t enjoy watching the little children running happily through the checkpoint.

                   

07:20  Yabed checkpoint

The Dothan valley landscape is so very beautiful.  The air is clear, the clouds soften the sun’s rays.  But there’s a checkpoint at the end of the lovely road; and soldiers whom we can’t see at the moment but can hear in the pillbox; and an armored D9 bulldozer, which the army has nicknamed “Dubi,” weighing 56 tons, with communications and firefighting equipment, a machine gun mount and 405 horsepower.  And why is this monster always parked here?  So if another earthen berm must be erected between the highway to Jenin and Yabed’s fields (so the residents won’t be able to use side roads) it can be done quickly.

 

08:10  Barta’a checkpoint

On the way back from Yabed to the Barta’a checkpoint you can see a river of colorful garbage flowing down to the wadi below.  A line of pickup trucks loaded with merchandise from the West Bank waits to be inspected and go through.  Private cars that can’t cross to the seam zone park by the roadside before the checkpoint, beyond the crowded parking lots.

  • Barta’a-Reihan Checkpoint

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    • This checkpoint is located on the Separation Fence route, east of the Palestinian town of East Barta’a. The latter is the largest Palestinian community inside the seam-line zone (Barta’a Enclave) in the northern West Bank. Western Barta’a, inside Israel, is adjacent to it. The Checkpoint is open all week from 5 a.m. to 9 p.m. Since mid-May 2007, the checkpoint has been managed by a civilian security company subordinate to the Ministry of Defense. People permitted to cross through this checkpoint into and from the West Bank are residents of Palestinian communities inside the Barta’a Enclave as well as West Bank Palestinian residents holding transit permit. Jewish settlers from Hermesh and Mevo Dotan cross here without inspection. A large, modern terminal is active here with 8 windows for document inspection and biometric tests (eyes and fingerprints).  Usually only one or two  of the 8 windows are in operation. Goods,  up to medium commercial size, may pass here from the West Bank into the Barta’a Enclave.  A permanent registered group of drives who have been approved by the may pass with farm produce. When the administration of the checkpoint was turned over to a civilian security firm, the Ya’abad-Mevo Dotan Junction became a permanent checkpoint. . It is manned by soldiers who sit in the watchtower and come down at random to inspect vehicles and passengers (February 2020).

  • Tura-Shaked

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    • Tura-Shaked

      This is a fabric of life* checkpoint through which pedestrians, cabs and private cars (since 2008) pass to and from the West Bank and the Seam-line Zone to and from the industrical zone near the settler-colony Shaked, schools and kindergartens, and Jenin university campuses. The checkpoint is located between Tura village inside the West Bank and the village of Dahar Al Malah inside the enclave of the Seam-line Zone.  It is opened twice a day, between 7 a.m. and 10 a.m., and from 12 noon to 7 p.m. People crossing it (at times even kindergarten children) are inspected in a bungalow with a magnometer. Names of those allowed to cross it appear in a list held by the soldiers. Usually traffic here is scant.

      • fabric of life roads and checkpoints, as defined by the Terminals Authority in the Ministry of Defense (fabric of life is a laundered name that does not actually describe any kind of humanitarian purpose) are intended for Palestinians only. These roads and checkpoints have been built on lands appropriated from their Palestinian owners, including tunnels, bypass roads, and tracks passing under bridges. Thus traffic can flow between the West Bank and its separated parts that are not in any kind of territorial contiguity with it. Mostly there are no permanent checkpoint on these roads but rather ‘flying’ checkpoints, check-posts or surprise barriers. At Toura, a small (less than one dunam) and sleepy checkpoint has been established, which has filled up with the years with nearly .every means of supervision and surveillance that the Israeli military occupation has produced. (February 2020)
      מחסום עאנין:  פרצה מפוארת במרכז המחסום
      Ruti Tuval
      Mar-21-2022
      Anin Checkpoint: A magnificent breach in the center of the checkpoint
  • Ya'bed-Dotan

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    • Ya’bed-Dotan

      This checkpoint is located on road 585, at the crossroads of Mevo Dotan settler-colony / Jenin/ Ya’abad. It has an army watchtower (‘pillbox’ post) and concrete blocs that slow down vehicular traffic. It was erected when Barta’a Checkpoint, lying to the west on the Separation Fence, was privatized and its operation was passed over to civilian security personnel. Since December 2009 this checkpoint enables flow of Palestinian vehicular traffic towards the Barta’a Checkpoint. Seldom is it manned by soldiers sitting in the watchtower, who conduct random inspections of vehicles and passengers. (february 2020)

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