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Eliyahu Crossing, Habla, Mon 26.9.11, Morning

Observers: Niba D., Ronny S., Translator: Charles K
Sep-26-2011
| Morning

 

07:01  Habla

The first five laborers enter.  There’s no scanner today, unlike last week.

About 50 laborers wait to cross.  A car is carefully inspected.  The truck from the plant nursery arrives from Habla loaded with saplings and is superficially checked.  A tractor also goes through; the MP gives the driver a quick once-over.  At the same time, the laborers continue to be checked without interruption relatively quickly in the inspection building.

 

07:15  The children’s buses arrive, the drivers wait for their documents to be inspected and soldiers check inside the bus.

About 30 laborers crossed during half an hour, and cars went through at the same time.

 

07:32  We leave.

There is a blue police car at the entrance to the Bedouin “village.”

 

Checkpoint 109

We park in the large parking lot next to some Palestinian taxis waiting for laborers.  The drivers say that laborers with entry permits go through this checkpoint every day, some to the Alfei Menashe industrial zone and others to the plant nurseries and farms.  Today the laborers who arrived at 04:00 still haven’t come through, and it’s 07:45.  They say the manager of the checkpoint knows they cross every day but don’t let them through until his supervisors arrive.  The first ones come out at about 07:50.

The taxi drivers complain that it takes them an hour to get through in the morning and an hour in the afternoon.

We go over to observe at the new checkpoint; the people running it ask us to move and not stand where we can see the checkpoint.  They say we’re interfering with them and it’s an area that belongs “to the Defence Ministry,” so we’re not permitted to be there.  We refuse to move.

There’s a special lane for cars with Israeli license plates which seem to belong to Palestinians.  The passengers have to get out and are very thoroughly inspected, by a dog as well.

We observe a family with two children carrying schoolbags who are waiting outside the car.  A dog checks a car; the vehicle inspections are very thorough, including noting the vehicle numbers.

Dan, who’s in charge of security at the checkpoint, says that procedures have changed and all the laborers must go through the Eyal crossing, which is why the laborers weren’t allowed through until their employers arrived from Alfei Menashe, and then they were permitted to cross.  Starting tomorrow (that is, today – Sept. 27), every laborer, without exception, will have to cross at Eyal, according to a new order from the GCO.

Sha’ul, the checkpoint commander, arrived, and he also asked us to move.  He said the new orders state we’re not allowed to stand at the checkpoint, the area belongs to the Defence Ministry, which is responsible for it, so we’re not allowed to stand there and he has the authority to order us not to stand at the checkpoint.

Sha’ul also tells us that the new orders permit people to cross only through Eyal.

When we tell him the bus drivers told us the buses were made to wait half an hour, and ask why, he says they were detained less than five minutes.

A horse and cart arriving from the direction of Qalqilya took about 20 minutes to get through the checkpoint; a car checked by a dog took about half an hour – it had an Israeli license plate.

 

08:40 – We leave, drive toward the entrance to Qalqilya.  A school bus from the Shomron Development Corp. enters the Border Police base next to Qalqilya and picks up soldiers.

 

08:45 – People cross freely through the Qalqilya checkpoint, including vehicles with Israeli license plates.

 

09:00  We drive to Jayyus via 'Azzun.  Everything’s quiet; we see many Palestinian flags flying along the roads.

We drive back toward Checkpoint 109; all along the way we see more military and police vehicles than usual.  We go through the checkpoint in the lane for Israelis, proudly flying the MachsomWatch flags.  The security guard wishes us farewell and we cross without being inspected. 

.

  • Eliyahu CP (109) / Crossing

    See all reports for this place
    • Eliyahu CP (109) / Crossing This checkpoint, also known as the Fruit Crossing, is one of the main checkpoints between Israel and the West Bank. It is located on Route 55 between Alfei Menashe and the turn to Qalqilya and Zufin, more than 4 km east of the Green Line, in the separation fence, which separates Qalqilya from its lands to the south, thus leaving Alfei Menashe West of the fence - the Seam Zone. This checkpoint, a few kilometers across the Green Line, is intended for "Israeli settlement in the West Bank and the population of the Seam Zone." It is managed by a civil company. Palestinians with a special permit for their lands in the seam area are also allowed to pass through it, on foot, and sometimes by car.  
  • Habla

    See all reports for this place
    • Habla CP (1393)

      The Habla checkpoint (1393) was established on the lands of the residents of Qalqilya, on the short road that

      connected it for centuries to the nearby town of Habla. The separation barrier intersects this road twice and cut off the residents of Qalqilya from their lands in the seam zone.(between the fence and the green line).
      There is a passage under Road 55 that connects Qalqilya to the sabotage This agricultural barrier is used by the farmers and nursery owners established along Road 55 from the Green Line and on both sides of the kurkar road leading to the checkpoint.
      This agricultural checkpoint serves the residents of Arab a-Ramadin al-Janoubi (detached from the West Bank), who pass through it to the West Bank and back to their homes. The opening hours (3 times a day) of this agricultural checkpoint are longer than usual, about an hour (recently shortened to 45 minutes), and are coordinated with the transportation hours of a-Ramadin children studying in the occupied in the West Bank.

       

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