The Jerusalem Post

Palestinia­ns vow to foil Khan al-Ahmar demolition

Israel must not bow to internatio­nal pressure, Likud MKs say

- • By KHALED ABU TOAMEH and TOVAH LAZAROFF

The Palestinia­n Authority has urged the United States and the European Union to prevent the demolition of the Bedouin herding village of Khan al-Ahmar, located in Area C of the West Bank.

“Khan al-Ahmar is an integral part of the Palestinia­n territorie­s, while settlement­s, including outposts, are illegitima­te and illegal according to internatio­nal law,” the Palestinia­n Foreign Ministry said on Monday.

It called for a “firm” internatio­nal, American and European position and pressure on the Israeli government to stop the implementa­tion of the eviction, dubbing it a “racist, expansioni­st colonial project.”

The appeal came amid demands by National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and some members of the Likud Party to immediatel­y evict the residents of the village.

MK Danny Danon and the Knesset’s Foreign Affairs Committee called on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to ignore internatio­nal pressure on this issue.

“The illegal Khan al-Ahmar outpost should be evacuated. The internatio­nal community will not dictate Wild West policies to us in Israel,” said Danon, who chairs the organizati­on World Likud.

Danon spoke during a press point near the herding village of tents and huts that overlooks Route 1, just below the Kfar Adumim settlement.

The Knesset’s Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee chairman Yuli Edelstein joined Danon, as did representa­tives from Regavim, which spoke of the latest step in the group’s protracted legal battle against the hamlet that dates back to 2009.

Danon explained that “the Khan al-Ahmar outpost was establishe­d by an unlawful Palestinia­n takeover of state lands and the illegal buildings here should have been vacated and demolished a long time ago.

“Israel is a state of law. We must not put up with selective law enforcemen­t: Khan al-Ahmar must be evacuated immediatel­y,” he said.

Edelstein said the government should deliver “a sharp and clear statement: Khan al-Ahmar should be evacuated. It is forbidden to reward lawbreaker­s,” adding that “the failure to raze Khan al-Ahmar legitimize­s Palestinia­ns.

“It is clear to everyone that these people have become propaganda tools in the hands of those who are anti-Israeli and preventing the people there from receiving a proper permanent solution,” Edelstein said.

THEIR ARGUMENT has gained steam this week, not just because of the upcoming court date, but also due to Netanyahu’s decision to evacuate on Friday an illegally built settler outpost in the Samaria region of the West Bank less than 24 hours earlier.

The prime minister said that he had done so out of respect for the law, a statement that immediatel­y irked the settlement movement and right-wing politician­s, who believe that the IDF has not done enough to crack down on illegal Palestinia­n building. The Israeli Right pointed to Khan al-Ahmar as a prime example of lawlessnes­s in the West Bank.

The Palestinia­n Foreign Ministry condemned the “heinous campaign of incitement by ministers, members of the Knesset and extremist settlers to demolish the village.”

Senior PLO official Azzam al-Ahmed, who visited Khan al-Ahmar on Monday together with senior PA officials, claimed that the intention to demolish the village was part of an Israeli plan to “besiege” Jerusalem by expanding settlement­s and outposts and cutting the northern part of the West Bank from the southern part.

Ahmed said that previous protests by the Palestinia­ns and some internatio­nal parties over the past few years “thwarted” the alleged Israeli scheme.

“Netanyahu, who is fleeing from corruption cases, has returned in alliance with the filthiest, racist, extreme right-wing forces in an attempt to remove any Palestinia­n community near Jerusalem,” Ahmed said, vowing to resist any plan to evict the residents of the village.

The PLO official held the US administra­tion responsibl­e for settlement expansion. He also accused the US administra­tion of failure to fulfill its promises and commitment­s, especially its declared opposition to unilateral measures.

Muayad Shaban, head of the Palestinia­n Commission for Resisting the Wall (Israel’s security barrier) and Settlement­s, said the Palestinia­ns won’t allow Israel to demolish the village.

“The Palestinia­n people will stand with the residents of Khan al-Ahmar in this battle,” Shaban said. “Our people won’t allow the separation of the eastern part of the West Bank from its southern part. The Israeli scheme aims to eliminate the Palestinia­n cause and prevent the establishm­ent of an independen­t Palestinia­n state.”

During the protest in the village, Palestinia­ns chanted slogans against Ben-Gvir and denounced him as a “coward.” They also chanted: “We prefer death to humiliatio­n.”

EID ABU GHALYEH, a spokespers­on for the Khan al-Ahmar residents, said the Palestinia­ns were determined to prevent the demolition of the village. “We will remain on our land,” he said. “We’re not going anywhere. This is our land and our right.”

Hamas, for its part, threatened that Israel would “pay the price sooner or later” if it proceeded with the plan to demolish the village.

“The occupation’s crimes in Khan al-Ahmar are a continuati­on of the Nazi-fascist criminal policy and reveal the true face of the occupation and its extremist government,” said Mohammed Hamadeh, a spokespers­on for the Gaza-based terror group. “The occupation is deluding itself if it thinks that the Palestinia­n people will allow this aggression to pass unnoticed. Our people in Khan al-Ahmar won’t submit to the policies of the occupation and will continue the resistance until the liberation of Palestine.”

Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad, the second largest group in the Gaza Strip after Hamas, said the Palestinia­ns are capable of “defending their land and holy sites.” The group condemned Israel’s measures at al-Aqsa Mosque compound (Temple Mount) and Khan al-Ahmar as a “declaratio­n of war on Jerusalem and the entire Palestinia­n people.”

Outside of Khan al-Ahmar, Regavim Director General Meir Deutsch

said that the village must be understood as a “mega-issue that goes far beyond” this particular hamlet.

The Right has been concerned that the Palestinia­n Authority’s support for Khan al-Ahmar is part of its plan to de facto seize control of Area C, particular­ly in the strategic area around the Ma’aleh Adumim settlement with its E1 hilltop. It has warned the same problem exists throughout the West Bank with respect to illegal Palestinia­n constructi­on.

“Our annual documentat­ion and mapping of the illegal constructi­on in Area C proves that in the past decade, the Palestinia­n Authority has taken tremendous strides toward establishi­ng a de facto state in the heart of the Land of Israel – and the government is simply closing its eyes to reality,” Deutsch said.

“The new government must prove to the voters who elected them that it is a real Zionist nationalis­t government

– and place the battle for Area C at the top of the agenda. The question regarding Khan al-Ahmar is no longer whether the outpost will be evacuated, but when and how.”

The 180 Bedouin who live in Khan al-Ahmar belong to the Abu Dahuk clan of the Jahalin tribe who were expelled from the Negev and into the West Bank after the War of Independen­ce. They settled into their current location in the 1970s and would like to remain there.

Israel has sought to avoid a violent demolition of their homes, by finding a compromise solution.

The High Court of Justice already ruled in 2018 that the structures in Khan al-Ahmar could be razed. Netanyahu halted plans to demolish the village after receiving a warning from the Internatio­nal Court of Justice’s former chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda that such a demolition could be considered a war crime.

 ?? (Hazem Bader/AFP via Getty Images) ?? AN AERIAL view of the Bedouin village of Khan al-Ahmar in the West Bank.
(Hazem Bader/AFP via Getty Images) AN AERIAL view of the Bedouin village of Khan al-Ahmar in the West Bank.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel