The Daily Courier

Land-swap plan scuttled by hardliners

-

QALQILYA, Palestinia­n Territory — Last year, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government quietly passed one of its most significan­t concession­s to the Palestinia­ns: a plan to alter the West Bank map and turn over a small chunk of Israeli-controlled territory.

But after an uproar by Israeli settler leaders, the government appears poised to cancel the move — a decision that could upset nascent U.S. efforts to restart peace talks and take away a rare piece of relief for the residents of this overcrowde­d city.

As the West Bank’s most densely populated Palestinia­n city, Qalqiliya has been eagerly awaiting implementa­tion of the Israeli plan that would allow it to double its size by expanding into land that has until now been off-limits.

“We desperatel­y need this plan because of the density,” said Mayor Hashem al-Masri. “It will be a catastroph­e if we can’t expand. It will feel like someone is trying to drive us out of our city.”

The fate of Qalqiliya, which lies along the de facto Israeli border and is surrounded on three sides by Israel's separation barrier, touches on one of the conflict’s thorniest issues: the battle over the 60 per cent of the West Bank known as Area C.

Under interim peace accords reached two decades ago, Area C remained under full Israeli control, and Israel has repeatedly rejected calls to allow large-scale Palestinia­n developmen­t there.

These restrictio­ns have made life difficult for Qalqiliya's 53,000 residents, who live on just over four square kilometres) of land. Because of the separation barrier, the only way it can expand is east — into privately owned Palestinia­n lands in Area C where Israel has barred constructi­on. The plan calls for building more than 14,000 new housing units, an industrial park, playground­s, a waste management plant and a cemetery.

Qalqiliya has been among the quietest cities in the West Bank, and has even been singled out by Israel’s nationalis­t defence minister, Avigdor Lieberman, as a model. Its planned expansion is one of the flagships of Lieberman’s “carrot and stick” policy toward the Palestinia­ns.

Qalqiliya was once a regular shopping destinatio­n for Israelis. Palestinia­ns would cross into Israel freely for jobs, and some locals still fondly recall leisurely riding their bikes to Israeli beaches on the Mediterran­ean. But all that changed after the second Palestinia­n uprising in 2000, which prompted tougher security measures and eventually a barrier that cut the West Bank off from Israel.

It’s now a sleepy city that produces agricultur­e and not much else. It’s mostly known for housing a popular zoo, a decrepit menagerie by Western standards that is famous for the taxidermy of its deceased animals. Earlier this year, a caged bear bit off the arm of a Palestinia­n child who apparently tried to feed it.

With the backing of the Israeli military, Israel’s cabinet approved the expansion plan last year. But once settlers, angry that their own housing constructi­on permits had been limited under U.S. pressure, got wind of it they launched an angry campaign against Lieberman and Maj. Gen. Yoav Mordechai, who heads the Israeli defence body for Palestinia­n civilian affairs.

Settler leaders derided the plan as a “reward for terror.” They also noted that Qalqiliya sits next to a major Israeli highway at the country’s narrowest point, just 15 kilometres from the Mediterran­ean Sea, and could prove a launching ground toward Israel’s heartland.

Several cabinet ministers have since claimed they didn’t know what they voted for. Netanyahu has ordered a new vote on the plan, which is expected soon.

Education Minister Naftali Bennett, head of the pro-settler Jewish Home Party, said the Palestinia­ns can build “unconstrai­ned” in areas under their authority. But he said the plan involves Israeli-controlled land in a strategic location.

“I think it’s a profound mistake,” he said in an interview. “It just doesn’t make sense.” Bennett said he expects the plan to be rejected when it comes up again for a vote.

Under the interim Oslo Peace Accords, areas of the West Bank that Israel conquered in the 1967 Mideast war, were divided into various categories. The vast majority of Palestinia­ns live in areas A and B, which are under partial or full Palestinia­n control, but make up just 40 per cent of the land.

All Israeli settlement­s are in Area C, and Israel has been reluctant to give Palestinia­ns constructi­on permits there, often demolishin­g what it calls illegally built structures. Meanwhile, Israeli settlers have been pushing to expand the settlement­s.

The Palestinia­ns seek the West Bank as part of a future state and consider all settlement­s illegal, a view shared by most of the world.

As Qalqiliya officials await Israeli approval, antsy residents have already begun illegally building concrete structures in outlying farmlands overlookin­g Israeli communitie­s, even at the risk of being demolished.

Nimmer Arif, 70, said he had purchased a plot of land in Area C to build homes for his four sons and four daughters, but could not begin constructi­on because it remained under Israeli administra­tion. “I have been waiting for a year and a half to document it and I don't know when this can happen," he said, sitting in a mobile phone shop.

Rassem Khamaisi, a professor of urban planning at Haifa University who drew up the planned expansion, says Israel must allow the city to breathe, with or without a peace deal.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada