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Bruqin, Haris, Kifl Harith, Kufr alDik, Wed 14.12.11, Morning

Observers: Tova H. and Hagar Z. (reporting)
Dec-14-2011
| Morning

Western Route

Translation:  Suzanne O.

Haris

9:45 a.m. 

We started the circuit at 9:30 a.m., and stopped at Haris by the car that was set on fire (see the attached photos) by settlers during the night.  There were 3 people standing there looking very concerned and tense.  They told us that the car belonged to a labourer from Kifl Haris who had been on his way to work the night shift at Brokin, had parked his car at Haris and, while he was at work, settlers set it alight.  They reported that a fire engine had arrived from Salfit only after the car had completely burnt out.  According to them, no one from the Israeli Security Forces came, in spite of the fact that not far away there is a watch tower, with cameras, from which the Israeli soldiers could have observed closely what was happening.  The Israeli media also did not send anyone to report on the incident.  On the wall beside the burnt out car is the well known logo: Price Tag.  Now only the painful question remains: who will compensate the owner of the burnt out car???

 

Kifl Harith

10:15 a.m. 

We took a short drive around the almost deserted village.  We didn't see a soul even by the local school.

Bruqin

10:30 a.m. 

The entrance from Road 5 was open.  On the way we saw the burnt out mosque – the entrance to the mosque has been cleaned and somewhat repaired.  We also saw the tractor and the car that had been set alight with the mosque and are left where they burned.

 

Kafr A-Dik

11:00 a.m. 

We arrived (a little late) at the women's club.  Hagar and Tova gave the lessons they teach weekly – Tova teaches beading and Hagar teaches Yoga.  This time Tova also distributed the money from the sale of the necklaces at the Cinematek and the women were very emotional and excited about it.

 

At about 1:00 p.m. we started for home. 

  • Bruqin

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    • Bruqin is a village of about 4,000 residents in Salfit County. 600 dunams of the village's land were expropriated in 1984 for the establishment of the Barkan industrial zone. Small sewage treatment plant This area is regularly flooded. The sewage flows into Baruchin and pollutes the streets of the village. In 1999, the Bruchin settlement was established. The barrier of separation and harassment Settlers keep the villagers away from 30% of their lands (about 4,000 dunams). About half of the village lands are in Area C, on which Israel prevents construction.
  • Haris

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    • Haris

      The village has 4,500 people and they have 5,000 dunams of land. The entrance to the village is blocked and opened arbitrarily, without informing the residents.The village has a seasonal checkpoint that blocks the road to the agricultural land and this checkpoint opens once a year! 2,500-3,000 dunams were stolen from the village in order to build the settlements of Revava and Netafim, which are located west of Haris.

      The center of the village is Area B and around Area C. The population grows but the occupation does not permit new construction in Area C.

  • Kifl Harith

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    • Kifl Harith

      This is a Palestinian located north-west of the settler-colony town of Ariel, 18 kilometers south of the city of Nablus. It numbers 3, 206 inhabitants, as of 2007. 42% of the village lands lie in Area B, and 58% in Area C. In 1978, some hundreds of dunams of the village’s farmland was sequestered in order to found the settler-colony of Ariel – in total 5,184 dunams from the Palestinian communities of Salfit, Iscaqa, Marda, and Kifl Harith. Dozens of square kilometers were also confiscated for paving road no. 5 as well as road 505 and their buffer zones, and the Israeli electricity company’s power station. Over the years the village has suffered harassment by sometimes-armed settler-colonists, even casualties. In 1968 the army’s rabbinate ruled the maqam site Nabi Yanoun (sanctified grave of the Prophet Yanoun) is in fact the tomb of Joshua, Son of Nun. Another structure in the village, named Nabi Tul Kifl by the Palestinians, has been identified by the Israeli authorities as to the tomb of Caleb, Son of Yefuneh. These sites are located in the heart of the village, near the mosque, and at times of Jewish religious festivities and pilgrimages, the center of the village is illuminated by projectors and thousands of Jews arrive, protected by hundreds of Israeli soldiers. During such a period, a night curfew is imposed on the village and the villagers are forced to stay shut inside their homes.

  • Kufr a-Dik

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    • Kufr a-Dik This is a Palestinian village in the Salfit district of the West Bank, located 8 kilometers east of the Green Line. The village population numbers 4,494 (as of 2007). 14.5% of the village were included in Area B (supposedly under Palestinian civil control) and 86% categorized as Area C – meaning both civil and military Israeli control, which severely affects the state of the village and its inhabitants. Over the years Israel has robbed 1,448 dunams from the village’s farmlands for the sake of building the settler-colonies of Penuel, Alei Zahav, Yoezer, Har Alei Zahav, and the industrial zone next to Penuel. Lands were also sequestered for the paving of Road 446 whose length stretches over 4 kilometers and includes a buffer zone 75-meters wide on both its sides. Following the paving of the road, the village has suffered not only landgrab but home demolitions and the destruction of water wells as well. Rates of unemployment in both the private and the public sectors reach 60%. In the years 2010-2013 creative activity was held by members of MachsomWatch and women of the village. For further information: http://vprofile.arij.org/salfit/pdfs/vprofile/Kafr%20ad%20Dik_tp_en.pdf
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