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Beit Furik, Burin (Yitzhar), Habla, Huwwara, Jit Junction , Madama

Observers: Fathiya, Carol C. (reporting)
Dec-17-2015
| Afternoon

Habla, 13:45-14:00

The gate is wide open and all seems quiet. Cars, trucks and pedestrians go back and forth.  All the solidiers we see are from the Military Police, according to big labels on their uniforms.

As it seems the gate will indeed stay open until 2:15 as scheduled, we leave at 2.

While driving on,  MW member calls Fathiya to say she has learned of the intention to close an important agricultural gate near Tul Karm, while three other gates in that area will be open only three times a week, rather than daily. One will be just for donkeys and tractors.

***

When we enter the territories, we see that all the bus stops have been fortified with concrete barriers.  Not so the makeshift stands where Palestinian boys are selling citrus fruit in buckets.

Jit: A Jeep and three soldiers by the road, while others observe from the watchtower.

Madama. As we enter through the western side, we see that a gate has been placed at the entrance, before the tunnel that leads to the village. Apparently the purpose of the new gate is for the army to be able to close the village quickly from both entrances.

Beit Furik:

We observe an unclear scene that unfolds in the course of about one hour:

By the watchtower at the entrance to Beit Furik, a Jeep is parked, and soldiers have detained two Palestinian cars. Three polite soldiers approach us and ask what is our business. We tell them and ask what is happening.  They say all is well and politely indicate it is not our business. We decide to move to the opposite corner to observe.

We see the soldiers questioning the two Palestinian drivers for about 10 minutes. The Jeep drives away, and we think the two will be released, but this is not the case.  Then two jeeps drive by, then another jeep and another, then a command car, all taking the road to Nablus.  A military ambulance passes and continues toward Nablus, then turns and pulls into the Beit Furiq entrance.  The command car returns and parks in back of the ambulance; a wheelchair is taken out of the ambulance. About 10 soldiers get out of the command car. After about half an hour, the two detained cars are told to park a little farther up the road.

Two soldiers cross the road to the corner where we are parked. They say “shalom”, than speaking Arabic, ask what we are doing; Fathiya explains, they say okay and leave us.

A Jeep arrives from the direction of Nablus, apparently with the injured person the ambulance is waiting for. A Palestinian ambulance arrives, also a Shabak car and four more jeeps. After a while, the two ambulances drive away from the corner up a slight incline to another road right above the highway.  A civilian car arrives (a relative of the wounded person?) The injured person is finally transferred to the Palestinian ambulance, which drives off in the direction of Nablus. All of this took about an hour.  It seems the IDF was in no hurry to get the injured person to hospital.

At some point, the two detained cars were allowed to continue on their way.

There had been news reports during the day of another incident in this area. A “suspicious Palestinian” (in the words of The Jerusalem Post website) was seen on the road near Huwwara earlier Thursday. Soldiers stopped to question him and he ran toward them with a knife, according to the news report. The soldiers shot him to death.

In Huwwara on the way back, we asked about this. The Palestinians told a different story, namely:  A Palestinian from Huwwara or Burin was standing near the entrance to Burin, at a distance from a settlers’ bus stop, when he was shot and killed by a soldier who was securing the bus stop.

 

 

  • Beit Furik checkpoint

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    • One of the three internal checkpoints that closed on the city of Nablus - Beit Furik to the east, Hawara to the south, Beit Iba to the west. The checkpoint is located at the junction of Roads 557 (an apartheid road that was forbidden for Palestinians), leading to the Itamar and Alon Morea settlements and Road 5487. The checkpoint was established in 2001 for pedestrians and vehicles; The opening hours were short and the transition was slow and very problematic.
      Allegedly, the checkpoint is intended to monitor the movement to and from Nablus of the residents of Beit Furik and Beit Dajan, being the only opening outside their villages. Since May 2009 the checkpoint is open 24 hours a day, the military presence is limited, vehicles can pass through it without inspections, except for random inspections. (Updated April 2010)
  • Burin (Yitzhar)

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    • Burin (Yitzhar)

      This is a Palestinian village in the Nablus governorate, a little south of Nablus, on the main road passing through the West Bank. The settlements: Yitzhar and Har Bracha, settled in locations that surrounded the village, placed fences so it is cut off the main road.

      There are around 4000 inhabitants. Most of them are engaged in agriculture and pasture, although many graduates of the two secondary schools continue to study at the university. Academic positions are hardly available, they find work as builderd, or leave for the Gulf countries.

      The village lands were appropriated several times for the establishment of Israeli settlements and military bases, and as a result, Burin's land and water resources dwindled. lSince 1982, more than 2,000 dunams of village land have been declared "state land" and then transferred to Har Bracha settlement.

      Over the past few years and more so since 2017, the villagers have been terrorized by the residents of Yitzhar and Har Bracha, the Givat Ronen outpost and others. Despite the close proximity of soldiers to an IDF base close to one of the village's schools, residents are suffering from numerous stone-throwing events, vehicle and fire arson, also reported in the press.

      In 2023, the prevention of the olive harvest in the village plot was more violent than ever. Soldiers and settlers walked with drawn weapons between the houses of the village and demanded that people stop harvesting in the village itself and in the private plots outside the village. The settlers from Yitzhar and Giv'at Roned raided the olive groves and stole crops. 300 olive trees belonging to the residents of Burin, near Yitzhar, were uprooted. The loss of livelihood from the olives causes long-term economic damage to the farmers' families, bringing them to the point of starvation.

      (updated for November 2023)

  • Habla

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    • Habla CP (1393)

      The Habla checkpoint (1393) was established on the lands of the residents of Qalqilya, on the short road that

      connected it for centuries to the nearby town of Habla. The separation barrier intersects this road twice and cut off the residents of Qalqilya from their lands in the seam zone.(between the fence and the green line).
      There is a passage under Road 55 that connects Qalqilya to the sabotage This agricultural barrier is used by the farmers and nursery owners established along Road 55 from the Green Line and on both sides of the kurkar road leading to the checkpoint.
      This agricultural checkpoint serves the residents of Arab a-Ramadin al-Janoubi (detached from the West Bank), who pass through it to the West Bank and back to their homes. The opening hours (3 times a day) of this agricultural checkpoint are longer than usual, about an hour (recently shortened to 45 minutes), and are coordinated with the transportation hours of a-Ramadin children studying in the occupied in the West Bank.

       

      חבלה: השער בשלבי סגירה
      Nina Seba
      Aug-18-2025
      Habla: The gate is in the process of closing
  • Huwwara

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    • The Huwwara checkpoint is an internal checkpoint south of the city of Nablus, at the intersection of Roads 60 and 5077 (between the settlements of Bracha and Itamar). This checkpoint was one of the four permanent checkpoints that closed on Nablus (Beit Furik and Awarta checkpoints to the east and the Beit Iba checkpoint to the west). It was a pedestrian-only barrier. As MachsomWatch volunteers, we watched therre  since 2001  two shifts a day -  morning and noon, the thousands of Palestinians leaving Nablus and waiting for hours in queues to reach anywhere else in the West Bank, from the other side of the checkpoint the destination could only be reached by public transport. In early June 2009, as part of the easing of Palestinian traffic in the West Bank, the checkpoint was opened to vehicular traffic. The passage was free, with occasional military presence in the guard tower.  Also, there were vehicle inspections from time to time. Since the massacre on 7.10.2023, the checkpoint has been closed to Palestinians.

      On February 26, 2023, about 400 settlers attacked the town's residents for 5 hours and set fire to property, such as houses and cars. Disturbances occurred in response to a shooting of two Jewish residents of Har Bracha by a Palestinian Terrorist. The soldiers stationed in the town did not prevent the arson and rescued Palestinian families from their homes only after they were set on fire. No one was punished and Finance Minister Smotrich stated that "the State of Israel should wipe out Hawara." Left and center organizations organized solidarity demonstrations and support actions for the residents of Hawara.

      Hawara continued to be in the headlines in all the months that followed: more pogroms by the settlers, attacks by Palestinians and  a massive presence of the army in the town. It amounted to a de facto curfew of commerce and life in the center of the city. On October 5, 2023, MK Zvi established a Sukkah in the center of Hawara and hundreds of settlers backed the army blocked the main road and held prayers in the heart of the town all night and the next day. On Saturday, October 7, 23 The  "Swords of Iron" war began with an attack by Hamas on settlements surrounding Gaza in the face of a poor presence of the IDF. Much criticism has been made of the withdrawal of military forces from the area surrounding Gaza and their placement in the West Bank, and in the Hawara and Samaria region in particular, as a shield for the settlers who were taking over and rioting.

      On November 12, 2023, the first section of the Hawara bypass road intended for Israeli traffic only was opened. In this way, the settlers can bypass the road that goes through the center of Hawara, which is the main artery for traffic from the Nablus area to Ramallah and the south of the West Bank. For the construction of the road, the Civil Administration expropriated 406 dunams of private land belonging to Palestinians from the nearby villages. The settlers are not satisfied with this at the moment, and demand to also travel through Hawara itself in order to demonstrate presence and control.

      (updated November 2023)

      .
      חווארה: הבתים הישנים בשטח סי
      Shoshi Anbar
      May-18-2025
      Huwara: The old houses in Area C
  • Jit Junction

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    • The checkpoint is located on Route 60 near at the junction with Route 55, near the village of Jit. There was a checkpoint for vehicles passing between the north and south of the West Bank, which was abolished towards 2010. Since then, surprise checkpoints have been set up there from time to time with a police or Border Police vehicle, and vehicles and their passengers are inspected.

      כביש יצהר צומת ג'ית: פקק תנועה
      Anat Polak
      Jul-17-2025
      Yitzhar Road, Jit Junction: traffic jam
  • Madama

    See all reports for this place
    • Madama

      This village is situated in the Nablus district, about 5 kilometers south of the city of Nablus, at an altitude of 517 meters above sea level. Madama was founded 400 years ago and its villagers originate from the Arabian Peninsula. It numbered 1,728 inhabitants in 2007. 62% of the village area is categorized as Area B, and 38% as Area C.

      Over the years, hundreds of dunams have been robbed of the village for the purpose of building settler-colonies, army bases, and paving roads:139 dunams were sequestered to found settler-colony Yitzhar south of the village, and the land was also confiscated for paving road 60. The road and its buffer zone (75 meters on each side) lined by barbed wire fences separate the village’s farmlands to the north and the village farmers are denied access to tend them. The road also separates Madama and Burin, two villages with close neighborly ties, and now not able to access the road directly.

      The settler-colony Yitzhar has become a daily threat to the village. The settler-colonists planted trees in fenced-in groves, steal crops, burn, uproot and vandalize Palestinians’ trees, and harm both holy sites and property. They also attack the Palestinian landowners in order to terrorize them and prevent them from accessing their lands.

      For further information: http://vprofile.arij.org/nablus/pdfs/vprofile/Madama_vp_en.pdf

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