
An anti-apartheid protest today blocked busy Highway 443, one
of many highways that run on occupied Palestinian land but are reserved for
Israelis only.
Israeli Security forces used force to move the demonstrators. Two of
the protesters, one Israeli and one American, were arrested and are being held
in an Israeli police post. Blake Murphy, from
Boston, is currently being threatened with deportation.
The protesters blocked the highway for over fifteen minutes by
organising a mass sit down in the road backed by six protestors chained into a
four metre pipe. Rush hour traffic was backed up for miles before the
protestors were removed by force. They distributing a message to the drivers
on the highway: “We know what it feels like to be blocked. We experience it
daily.”
The masses of Israelis who regularly travel to
Jerusalem via the settlement of Modi’in were surprised
this morning to find the highway blocked by non-violent protesters. Despite
obvious road blocks at the junctions with roads from the Palestinian villages
along the highway, few are aware that for seven years now, Highway 443 has
been accessible to Israelis only. Palestinians
are forbidden to travel on the highway, even on the 9.5 kilometer-long segment
which passes through occupied West Bank territory and is built on land that
has been confiscated from Palestinians whose olive trees have been cut down
“for the benefit of the local population.” [See comment from
Israel’s newspaper Haaretz, “The Law as Roadkill”
The Israeli military claims that the prohibition of Palestinian traffic on the
main road is temporary and subject to security considerations. But their
actions on the ground suggest otherwise. In order to “compensate” the
communities, the military has confiscated more land for the creation of what
they term “fabric of life” roads at an estimated cost of 177.9 million shekels
(approximately US$44.5 million). These roads will funnel Palestinian traffic
under the Israeli road network via tunnels and underpasses connecting
communities in nearby enclaves, thus putting the Palestinians out of sight and
out of mind for Israelis.
The Israeli Human rights group B’tselem states that the
prohibition on Palestinian use of Highway 443 appears to be based on
Israel’s desire to annex the area along which the road runs. B’tselem
explains that if
Israel was only interested in protecting the lives of Israelis, rather
than annexing the area, it could limit or even prohibit the travel of Israelis
on the road cutting through the
West Bank and build roads inside Israeli territory, thus providing safe
channels of transportation to connect
Jerusalem and
Tel Aviv.
The policy of prohibiting movement on this road is not an isolated case but is
part of a general widespread policy [see map]. On 312 kilometers of main roads
in the
West Bank, vehicles bearing Palestinian
license plates are forbidden or restricted access. The creation of a
regime of “forbidden roads” has converted the right to freedom of movement in
the
West Bank into a privilege that is dependent upon the national origin
of an individual. [see International Convention on Apartheid] These roads, in
addition to the segregation wall, carve up Palestinian areas into isolated
enclaves. This fragmentation is at the root of the
West Bank’s declining economy.
In an appeal, The Association for Civil Rights in
Israel (ACRI ) states that the term “Crime of Apartheid,” applies to
acts that are used as a means for establishing and maintaining domination of
one racial group of persons over any other racial group and systematically
oppressing them. ACRI states that an accepted systematic policy of
discrimination against the Palestinian population constitutes a practice of
apartheid as defined by the International Convention on the Suppression and
Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid. Separation exists between Palestinians
and Israelis in the
West Bank in many other aspects of life, as with the two separate legal
systems that exist for the two populations.
Mohammed Khatib, spokesperson for the Palestinian
Anti-Apartheid Movement said: “Israel
wants to legitimize apartheid and call it peace. This is the first in a series
of popular non-violent protests against the Israeli system of apartheid.
”anti-apartheid activists block highway 443 Thursday morning, protesting the
Israeli-only road which traverses occupied Palestinian land. A major highway,
it is inaccessible to Palestinians.
anti-apartheid activists block highway 443 Thursday morning, protesting the
Israeli-only road which traverses occupied Palestinian land. A major highway,
it is inaccessible to Palestinians.anti-apartheid activists block highway 443
Thursday morning, protesting the Israeli-only road which traverses occupied
Palestinian land. A major highway, it is inaccessible to
Palestinians.anti-apartheid activists block highway 443 Thursday morning,
protesting the Israeli-only road which traverses occupied Palestinian land. A
major highway, it is inaccessible to Palestinians.
anti-apartheid activists block highway 443 Thursday morning,
protesting the Israeli-only road which traverses occupied Palestinian land. A
major highway, it is inaccessible to Palestinians.anti-apartheid activists
block highway 443 Thursday morning, protesting the Israeli-only road which
traverses occupied Palestinian land. A major highway, it is inaccessible to
Palestinians.anti-apartheid activists block highway 443 Thursday morning,
protesting the Israeli-only road which traverses occupied Palestinian land. A
major highway, it is inaccessible to Palestinians.
Fotos available at
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The Bilin Friends of Justice and Freedom society
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FFJ-Bilin@yahoogroups.com
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Email:
majdarmajdar@yahoo.com Tel: 972 547 847 942
Note: Our website is under construction. We will keep you
posted.
Eyad Burnat, Head of the founding committee, head of the Bilin
Popular committee
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