Douma: A visit to Douma a month after the disturbances in the village - machsomwatch
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Douma: A visit to Douma a month after the disturbances in the village

Place: Duma Qusra
Observers: Dafna and Tamar Translation: Bracha Ben-Avraham
May-22-2024
| Morning

At the end of April, dozens of settlers invaded the village of Duma and attempted to set homes on fire and burned vehicles.  After these atrocities, we returned to see what had happened to the house we had seen that was partially burned.  A family had been in the second floor of the house when settlers set the ground floor on fire.  The house remains empty.  The family had gone to live with relatives.  The burnt cars were taken away, but none of the cars or trucks were insured.

 

A friendly elderly couple invited us in for coffee on their front terrace.  They told us about the night of the atrocities.  The windows were shattered and the settlers threw a Molotov cocktail into the house.  Luckily they succeeded in putting out the fire and were saved. 

We drove through the entrance to the village of Kusra and saw that the main gate was locked and all the roads leading out of the village were blocked.   The residents are forced to leave the village by the road leading to Joresh, which is much longer.

Before driving to Fasayil we stopped to buy flour, rice, pasta, lentils, and vegetables for Maryam’s family.  Maryam is a blind woman who we take to receive injections in her eyes.  Her son had called several days ago and begged us to bring food.

Location Description

  • Duma

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    • Duma
      A village in the Nablus governorate, with 3,000 residents. They owned some 18,000 dunams, 500 dunams of which the village itself was built. However, after the settlement of Migdaleim annexed a large part of their land, their area was reduced to only 2,000 dunams.

      On July 31, 2015, two houses in the town were torched with petrol bombs.  Sa'ad and Riham Dawabsha, and their infant, Ali Sa'ad Dawabsha, were burned to death. Another son was seriously injured. "Revenge" and "King Messiah" were spray painted on the walls of the house. The trial of the arsonist, the settler Amiram Ben Uliel, is still underway (2019), and a plea bargain was signed in May 2018 with the minor who participated in the planning of the arson. 

      The closure imposed by the army, the poor roads that they are forced use due to the lack of paving permits from the Civil Administration, along with the lack of public transportation, all these difficulties cut off the village from nearby Nablus and Ramallah.

  • Qusra

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    • Qusra

      This village is located in the Nablus district, about 28 kilometers south-east of the city. Its population numbers 4,310 as of 2007 (according to the Palestinian census). After the Oslo Accords, 50% - most of the village’s built-up area – was categorized Area B, and about 70 homes as well as the rest of its land are inside Area C.

      In 1983, 177 dunams of the village lands were confiscated by Israel to build a ‘Nahal’ stronghold, turned civilian in 1985 and named Migdalim settler-colony, east of the village itself. To the north-east is a gas station and a leather plant, as well as a studio producing wood ware, all of which are a branch of the settler-colony. Dozens of additional farmland were confiscated from Qussra and Jaloud in order to erect the settler-colonies Esh Qodesh and Ahiya.

      “The villagers point to the settler-colonists of Esh Qodesh as the source of their problem. Qussra villagers were forbidden to tend their lands located a kilometer away from the Esh Qodesh fence, and about 20 meters from the area declared military zone. What about the ‘legitimate’ plots? Their crops are regularly destroyed by the settler-colonists. Fires break out in wheat fields, olive trees are cut down, wells are destroyed – these have all become routine events. In spite of all of this, the head of the local council sees the Israeli army as the main source. He says that the settler-colonists could not have harassed the villagers without the army backing them up…”

      (From a MW report, August 3, 2015)

      In 2001, the Israeli army evacuated its intelligence base “Kida”. In 2003, the settler outpost Kida was established, a quick attempt was made to evict the newcomers, but they were eventually allowed to remain.

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

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