Bethlehem (300), Fri 3.2.12, Morning
9:20-11:15 AM
Bethlehem – Checkpoint 300:
four lanes are open, with far more Palestinians crossing today than in previous weeks.
Today, again, there are people who haven’t heard that a 5 year-old Palestinian child needs a permit to cross. A smiling father, speaking Hebrew and accompanied by his 6 year-old boy, has difficulty believing this. Full of hope, he explains that this is a one-time only entry and that the child is small. He tries his luck at another lane, but nothing helps and we are likewise powerless to assist. Several similar cases arise. With them all, we hear “but he’s only a small child, here’s his kushan, here, he’s on my passport.” But the same opaque answer is heard each time: “He cannot cross.”
An elderly woman also appears without the required permit. She smiles and says “Ana kabira” but it’s no use.
Another despicable phenomenon is that they prevent people from entering who already have a permit but that won’t be valid until 1-2 days from now.
At the end of our shift, an elderly woman and Beit Jalla resident comes over to tell us that her 18 year-old granddaughter lives in Ramle and has recently gotten engaged (she shows us a gilded picture album). The granddaughter has come to spend two weeks with her grandmother. Today, on her way back, she’s been delayed at the checkpoint. The grandmother intended to accompany her to the central bus station and is waiting, worried, for her granddaughter to come out. We try to ask and are told the issue is “being taken care of” and that she’d be out in 5 minutes. As those minutes pass, we approach them again and are informed it will take some time and that she’ll come out towards Israel and not back through the checkpoint. The grandmother has no cell phone and doesn’t know her granddaughter’s cell phone, either, so we can’t find out how it all ended.
Bethlehem (300)
See all reports for this place-
Located adjacent to the Separation Wall ("Jerusalem Wrap") at the north entrance to Bethlehem, this checkpoint cuts off Bethlehem and the entire West Bank from East Jerusalem, with all the serious implications for health services, trade, education, work and the fabric of life. The checkpoint is manned by the Border police and private security companies. It is an extensive infrastructure barrier and is designated as a border terminal, open 24 hours a day for foreign tourists. Israeli passport holders are not allowed to pass to Bethlehem, and Palestinian residents are not allowed to enter Jerusalem, except those with entry permits to Israel and East Jerusalem residents. Israeli buses are allowed to travel to Bethlehem only through this checkpoint.The checkpoint, which demonstrated harsh conditions of crowding and extreme passage delays for years, started employing advanced electronic identification posts and has upgraded its gates' system as of the middle of 2019 - and conditions improved.Adjacent to the checkpoint, in an enclosure between high walls and another passage, is the historic Rachel's Tomb, which is now embedded within a concrete fortified building. It contains prayer and study complexes for Jews only, as well as a residential complex. updated November 2019 .
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