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Tour of the enclaves in the Jerusalem area

Observers: Michaela R., Neta E.
Feb-02-2013
| Morning

Translator: Charles K.

This time the minibus was almost full, almost all of them our supporters. Some members of Machsom Watch from everywhere in the country. Bless you for coming.

The places we visit are almost unknown, particularly because they’re hemmed in from all sides – in other words, they’re enclaves.

The tour began at Kafr Aqab.

It’s very difficult to explain how residents of this village, located within Jerusalem’s municipal boundaries, but nevertheless outside of the wall surrounding the city, must enter Jerusalem through the Qalandiya checkpoint.

The locality doesn’t receive municipal services from the city – no garbage collection, no Bezeq phone lines, no police, etc. But they pay municipal taxes in hard cash.

Recently new members were selected for the local council (all volunteers). We were introduced to Bassem, the new vice chairman. He met us at municipal headquarters, and accompanied us during our entire tour.

He expresses himself wonderfully (in Hebrew), and is a fine actor. He tells about the village’s difficulties, giving examples from his own life. His descriptions, filled with humor, emphasize the absurd and painful situation in which the residents here live, as do the Palestinians in general under the occupation.

Then we went to the village of Qalandiya, where the wall cutting them off from Jerusalem was completed a few months earlier.

We visited one of the houses that remained on the other side of the wall and in effect was part of the Jerusalem area. The inhabitants of the house have green (Palestinian) ID cards, which makes them illegal occupants of their home. They’re simply trapped between two walls. They contacted Dahleh, an attorney, for help obtaining Jerusalem residency; of course, he’ll charge them a lot of money – and their chances????? They’re pensioners – how can they afford a lawsuit?

The meeting with the family left a very strong impression on us all.

We continued to Bir Nabala and visited the grandiose wedding halls that now stand empty. Here’s a video about them by B’Tselem.

Then we reached Beit Ijza, trapped on the border of Giv’on Hahadasha. We met M., a hydraulic engineer, who always helps us.

On the way, looking out over the village of Duku, the Ayalot basin-Giv’at Ze’ev, it becomes obvious that the fence is not for security but in order to expand the settlements at the expense of Palestinian land.

We concluded with falafel in pita on the Jerusalem-Ramallah road, near Kafr Aqab.

 

  • Beit Ijza (6179) CP

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    • Beit Ijza CP- the outskirts of the new Givon: The checkpoint placed on the separation barrier consists of several high gates and fences that surround a Palestinian house cage from the village of Beit Ijaza, which the separation wall left in the area of the new Givon settlement. The settlement did not give up any space around the trapped house. The residents of the house are Palestinians and their entire lives have remained beyond the fence. They can move to Beit Ijaza only with special permits.

      Read about MachsomWatch tour to Beit Ijza:  https://machsomwatch.org/en/node/20941

  • Kufr 'Aqab

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    • Kufr 'Aqab

      25,000 people live in this village, and since the erection of the Separation Wall, it has been disconnected from Jerusalem and become a neighborhood totally abandoned as far as law enforcement and planning and construction are concerned. The thousands of inhabitants of this undefined urban area pay municipal taxes to the city of Jerusalem but the Israeli authorities – municipality, police, and various service companies – hardly enter these places, and the Palestinian authorities avoid them too since the Oslo Accords forbid them to act within Jerusalem’s jurisdiction.

      MachsomWatch teams coming to their Qalandiya vigils sometimes go through the village itself, and the organization’s tours include the enclaves north of Jerusalem.

       

  • Rafat (Bir Nabala)

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    • Rafat (Bir Nabala) With the completion of the Bir Nabala enclave, which includes also Al Jib, Al Judeira and Beit Hanina al Balad, a checkpoint was put at enclave exit. The passage into the enclave is allowed only to the enclave inhabitants and to Ramallah District people.
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