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Dura-Al Fawwar Junction, Hebron

Observers: Hagit Back; Translator:  Charles K.
May-30-2016
| Morning

Hebron area

I note the date and think, almost 50 years of occupation.  We’ve all become used to it, grown thick-skinned, as if things have to be this way.

Short shift today, so I didn’t reach Hebron.

But here’s what I saw nevertheless:

A checkpoint at the exit from Dahariyya to Highway 60:

 

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Additional construction at the Othniel settlement (an appropriate Zionist response to Dafna’s horrible murder)

 

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No children were throwing stones at al-Fawwar junction.  The pillbox was there, and the sheep.

 

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A new bus stop on Highway 317, at the turn to the Metzudat Yehuda checkpoint.  Netivei Yisrael is repaving all the roads in the area.  You should know where your money goes…

 

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On another bus stop we found this painting – as though the occupation didn’t exist.

 

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No, the despair isn’t becoming any easier.

  • Dura Al-Fawwar Junction

    See all reports for this place
    • Junction on Route 60: west - the town of El Dura, east - the Al Fawwar refugee camp. There is a manned pillbox  at the junction. From time to time the army sets up flying checkpoints at the entrance to El Fawwar and Al Dura. Al-Fawwar is a large refugee camp (7,000 inhabitants in 2007) established in 1949 to accommodate Palestinian refugees from Be'er Sheva and Beit Jubrin and environs. There are many incidents of stone-throwing. In the vicinity of the pillbox there are excellent agricultural areas, Farmers set up stalls adjacent to the plots close to the road. In recent months the civil administration  has set up dirt embankments thereby blocking access to the stalls, and making it impossible for the farmers to sell their vegetables. Updated April 2021, Michal T.
  • Hebron

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    • According to Wye Plantation Accords (1997), Hebron is divided in two: H1 is under Palestinian Authority control, H2 is under Israeli control. In Hebron there are 170,000 Palestinian citizens, 60,000 of them in H2. Between the two areas are permanent checkpoints, manned at all hours, preventing Palestinian movement between them and controlling passage of permit holders such as teachers and schoolchildren. Some 800 Jews live in Avraham Avinu Quarter and Tel Rumeida, on Givat HaAvot and in the wholesale market.

       

      Checkpoints observed in H2:

       

      1. Bet Hameriva CP- manned with a pillbox
      2. Kapisha quarter CP (the northern side of Zion axis) - manned with a pillbox
      3. The 160 turn CP (the southern side of Zion axis) - manned with a pillbox
      4. Avraham Avinu quarter - watch station
      5. The pharmacy CP - checking inside a caravan with a magnometer
      6. Tarpat (1929) CP - checking inside a caravan with a magnometer
      7. Tel Rumeida CP - guarding station
      8. Beit Hadassah CP - guarding station

      Three checkpoints around the Tomb of the Patriarchs

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