Beit Iba
Beit Iba, Saturday, 8.7.06 AMObservers: Adina, Elath (reporting)Beit Iba 09:02 – vehicles: from west to east – 13, average waiting time 20 minutes; east to west – average waiting time half an hour.Pedestrians: from west to east about 200, mainly young men waiting; from east to west – individuals.Detainees – three.A young man with his small brother, maybe 7 years old, detained.09:14 – more detainees being put in the compound all the time, presently nine.09:18 – the line waiting to enter is down to 15. Adult men and women without inspection.One detainee released.09:20 – a military policeman facing the detention hut, with a radio and a pile of Ids with lists, releases detainees all the time, but his industrious comrades each send new ones in. The detainee with the child is released. Twelve now detained.09:28 – four detainees.Vehicles – in both directions half an hour.09:39 – only one detainee. The pedestrian line very thin.We left because we thought we would manage to get to Huwwara, which ultimately did not happen.Jit Junction 10:05 – block from north and from east to west. 21 vehicles in line. Two soldiers checking. Two ambulances pass without lining up. No detainees.Taxis: the driver who reaches the head of the line gets out with his ID and walks to the soldiers. After they approve, all the passengers get out and walk through the inspection. Only after that is the taxi allowed to proceed to inspection. This process slows down the whole line. Average wait per vehicle one hour. Many taxi drivers “steal” through in front of the heavy trucks, which is unfair to the “honest” ones who wait patiently...10:23 – phone call to the Centre. I.: “We have no ability to intervene in considerations, but will check and get back to you.” I left my phone number with a driver and asked him to report when he gets through, but that hasn’t yet happened.I. from the Centre phoned me at 11:38 to ask whether there was any improvement... Well, in my garden which I was watering at that moment there was improvement, but at Jit Junction I couldn’t say...