torsdag 5. mai 2022

Israel misbruker opprettelse av skyteområde for å skvise ut palestinere ved Hebron på Vestbredden

Israels Høyesterett har i dag dømt i en sak som har vært utsatt og utsatt i 20 år.
Nå vedtas det at palestinere må vekk fra et skytefelt opprettet av IDF i 1981:
 

"The High Court of Justice accepted the state's claim that residents of the villages in Masafer Yatta near Hebron began squatting in the area after it was declared a firing zone by the Israeli military in 1981"  (Haaretz 5. mai 2022)

Det er liten tvil at man her bruker denne begrunnelsen for å oppnå etnisk rensing i dette området.
Og det er nå ingen tvil om hva Israels Høyesterett er blitt.

HELE artikkelen i Haaretz nederst

Skudeneshavn  5. mai 2022

Jan Marton Jensen

 

På Twitter:
5. mai 2022
https://twitter.com/janmarton/status/1522273541068103680 

6. mai 2022
https://twitter.com/janmarton/status/1522618009566728192 

5. desember 2022
https://twitter.com/janmarton/status/1599757437757595648

11. januar 2023
https://twitter.com/janmarton/status/1613141039900135424

5. september 2023
https://twitter.com/janmarton/status/1699089640827879811

Ny info:

2. juni 2023
https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/2023-06-02/ty-article-magazine/.premium/israeli-settlers-allowed-to-live-in-w-bank-firing-zone-after-palestinians-were-evacuated/00000188-7832-d4df-a39c-ff7bf4500000

11. januar 2023
https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/2023-01-11/ty-article/.highlight/israeli-army-advances-eviction-of-eight-palestinian-villages-in-west-bank/00000185-9d69-d94b-ad8d-bfef84390000

6. mai 2022
https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-high-court-justices-know-israel-won-t-face-sanctions-over-masafer-yatta-evictions-1.10782233

Kilde:
5. mai 2022      
https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/israel-palestine-supreme-court-paves-way-eviction-masafer-yatta

8. august 2015   Bildesamling
https://www.aljazeera.com/gallery/2015/8/8/the-last-cave-dwellers-of-palestine

 

HELE artikkelen i Haaretz 5. mai 2022

Israeli Top Court Approves Eviction of Eight Palestinian Villages After Decades-long Battle

The High Court of Justice accepted the state's claim that residents of the villages in Masafer Yatta near Hebron began squatting in the area after it was declared a firing zone by the Israeli military in 1981


Residents of Masafer Yatta demonstrate against their eviction in front of the High Court of Justice in Jerusalem in March
Residents of Masafer Yatta demonstrate against their eviction in front of the High Court of Justice in Jerusalem in MarchCredit: Emil Salman
 
The High Court of Justice approved Wednesday the eviction of some 1,000 Palestinians from eight villages in the southern West Bank, after a two-decade legal dispute over land that has been repurposed by the Israeli army as a firing zone, and where Palestinians have lived for generations. 

Justices David Mintz, Ofer Grosskopf and Isaac Amit rejected claims by the Palestinian petitioners that they had been living in the Masafer Yatta area near Hebron before it was declared a military firing zone in 1981. Each of the petitioners was ordered to pay 20,000 shekels ($5,900) in expenses.

The petitioners, represented by the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, presented aerial footage in an attempt to show that the villages had existed in the area for 45 years. The state, however, argued that Palestinian residents began squatting in the area after it was declared Firing Zone 918 in the 1980s, and that until then it was only used as seasonal pasture land for their livestock.


Justice Mintz wrote in the verdict, published Wednesday, that the question of whether the area was a place of permanent residence is "not complicated at all" as aerial footage from the area prior to 1980 shows no indication of a residential presence there. Mintz also cited that the fact that the area was used by the air force to conduct simulated airstrikes in the 1990s, as well as on reports issued over the years by supervisory units.

The court rejected the claim that turning the area into a closed militrary zone was contrary to international law, and said that when international law contradicts Israeli law, the latter prevails.

Masafer Yatta, in the West BankCredit: Google Maps

The Palestinian petitioners argued that they and their families have been living in these villages, whose homes are built within natural caves, since before the establishment of the country in 1948, and are part of a unique mix of communities. The residents make their living through herding livestock and agriculture, and the nearby city of Yatta offers them medical and education services, commerce and residence in the summer. With time, they said, the population in the area increased and so did its needs.


The land was first designated as a firing zone in 1981, but residents in the area remained relatively undisturbed until the late 1990s. In 1999, the military and the Civil Administration evicted more than 700 residents. The first petition against the evictions was submitted in 2000, after which a temporary injunction was issued, which allowed residents to return to the area until the case wassettled. 

In April 2012, the state told the court that the military had modified its plan for the firing zone and requested that eight villages would be demolished, instead of 12, after which the High Court suggested that the petitioners withdraw their suits. Two other petitions were submitted in 2013. 

The court accepted the state's request that the petitions be rejected outright due to the fact that the first petition was submitted in 1997, even though the area was already declared a firing zone in the 1980s. The justices also said that the locals did not provide any proof of ownership of these lands, and continued building on it despite being served eviction notices. 


Justice Mintz said that the petitioners’ assertion that they had to build on the land in question land to sustain themselves was "outrageous" and that the temporary order issued in 2000 permitted them to stay there, but did not grant them permission to build on the land.

The court also rejected a request by the Masafer Yatta group of villages' local council to join the proceedings as a "friend of the court." Justice Mintz wrote that the claim of discrimination against Masafer Yatta as opposed to the nearby Jewish settlement of Susya was unfounded.

Mintz also rejected the petitioners' claims that the designation of the area as a firing zone was based on outside considerations and instead accepted the military's position that the land was necessary for its needs. 

Lastly, the he stated that the state had made an offer to the petitioners that would have them evacuate the area during training, but would allow them to return for agricultural purposes on weekends and holidays. This, the judges said, was proof of the state's consideration of the residents' agricultural needs.

The Association for Civil Rights in Israel said the ruling was "unusual and would carry severe consequences." The organization accused the court of approving a move that would "leave families, children and elderly without a roof over their heads."

Masafer Yatta council chairman Nadal Younes said in response that the ruling was ideological and was not based on justice, adding that "there were those who said from the beginning that there was no hope with the Israeli court – they were right."

Ben Alofs

17:02
About 1500 Palestinians in a dozen hamlets in the West Bank maintain the ancient tradition of cave dwelling. Palestinian anthropologist Ali Qleibo is studying these last cave dwellers of Palestine. According to his research until the 19th century all of the tribes south of Jerusalem to the outskirts of Beersheba were cave dwellers. “The powerful symbolism of these caves still resonates in the Judeo-Christian-Muslim tradition, as is evident in the Cave of Abraham, the Cave of the Nativity in Bethlehem, and the cave under the Dome of the Rock”. See the article with photos “The last cave dwellers of Palestine” in AlJazeera.
It cannot be that this wanton act of cultural of genocide can be allowed to go ahead.
3

J. Martin Bailey

16:58
AI have just received from you the report of how Israel has removed hundreds of Palestinians from land they have lived on for decades. I am reminded of the way early American settlers drove out the Native American Indians. That was terrible and your activity is unthinkable in our modern world. I am appalled! I would like to respect and be friendly with Israelites. This is a serious action that needs to be appealed to the World Court. I am, frankly, appaled with your action.
Reply to comment

Observer

17:01
J. Martin Bailey
Israelites? Seriously?
2

Ben Alofs

16:20
The minutes of a 1981 ministerial meeting show paunchy war criminal Ariel Sharon proposing the allocation of Palestinian land in the West Bank to the Israeli army for the sole purpose of forcing Palestinians out of their homes.
Israel’s Supreme Court is part and parcel of this thieving scheme. Any vestige of respectability it once had has now fallen by the wayside after this abject siding with the violators of international law and the occupiers. The Supreme Court too is now controlled by the settlers. It is as bad as the military court in Ofer.
Zionism shows its true face as a colonial settler ideology relentlessly stealing Palestinian land, committing cultural genocide and as a violator of international law. No wonder that B’tselem has given up on Israel’s legal system. Palestinians will find no justice here.
The only correct answer is to continue to build and expand the BDS movement against this criminal enterprise.
1

Observer

16:17
Horrible decision. The court is enabling bad policy. Hubris.


 

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