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Bruqin, Haris, Kufr alDik, Za’tara (Tapuah), Tue 25.12.12, Morning

Observers: Natalie Cohen, Naomi Bentsur (reporting) Translator: Charles K.
Dec-25-2012
| Morning

 

09:30 We left Rosh Ha’Ayin in Nadim’s vehicle.

The pupils asked not to have an English class today. The schoolchildren have exams and the mothers have been enlisted to help them, so we began our circuit immediately.

 

Kafr a-Dik: A military jeep is parked at the entrance to the village, next to the concrete barriers that have been moved to the side. The village is very quiet. The club is closed. The loudspeaker on the municipal building announces that residents should come pay for electricity cards. It turns out that they pay for electricity in advance by buying cards. The residents decide how much to buy. Four shiny taxis are parked at the exit, unemployed.

 

10:30 Brukin. This village is also quiet. Most shops are closed, few people in the lanes.

 

10:45 Hars. We wanted to see whether tour buses and minibuses could reach the area of the demolished homes. The result: there’s an easy route for minibuses, including a partly paved road. It’s only a short distance to walk from where the minibus has to stop. The route is relatively narrow, too narrow for a bus.

 

11:15 We searched for an alternate route. We drove through Qira and Jama’in. On the way we saw a pretty rare sight – a garbage truck emptying large refuse bins.

 

11:30 Tapuach junction. A festival of “democracy”: the junction is plastered with election posters competing for settlers’ votes: Likud, Otzma LeYisrael, and the most prominent – Naftali Bennett. Little military presence at the junction. We then drove via the Ariel junction to Kifl Hars. The road is paved and wide enough for a bus to reach the area of Hars where the demolished buildings are located. Thus we finished our mission.

 

There was little military presence all along the way, and all the villages were quiet.

 

12:15 Back to the Rosh Ha’Ayin train station.

  • 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.

  • 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
  • Za'tara (Tapuah)

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    • Za'tara (Tapuah) Za'tara is an internal checkpoint in the heart of the West Bank, at the intersection of Road 60 and Road 505 (Trans-Samaria), east of the Tapuah settlement. This checkpoint is the "border" marked by the IDF between the north and south of the West Bank, in accordance with the policy of separation between the two parts of the West Bank that has been in place since December 2005. At the Za'tara checkpoint, there are separate routes for Israelis and Palestinians. In the route for Israelis, there are no inspections and the route for Palestinians inspects. The queue lengthens and shortens suits. The checkpoint is open 24 hours a day. The checkpoint is partially staffed and the people who pass through it are checked at random.  
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