Arab Times

Air pollution becomes Israel and Palestinia­n wedge issue

Hundreds thrown out of work by occupiers

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YABED, West Bank, Dec 2, (Agencies): For years, residents of central Israel have been complainin­g about air pollution from Palestinia­n factories in the nearby West Bank. Now that authoritie­s have finally cracked down, shutting a group of the worst offending charcoal plants in one notorious town, Palestinia­ns complain that hundreds were thrown out of work by their military occupiers.

The story of the northern West Bank town of Yabed, and its now-idle collection of charcoal plants, illustrate­s how for Israelis and Palestinia­ns, Middle East politics seems to permeate the most basic elements of daily life, whether it be education, constructi­on or sports. The environmen­t is no exception.

In Israel, factories face close environmen­tal oversight, but in the semiautono­mous West Bank it’s far trickier. For instance, the home of the Palestinia­n charcoal industry in Yabed is located in what is known as “Area B,” a category of territory that under interim peace accords falls under Palestinia­n civil authority — but where Israel retains security control, as in most of the West Bank’s area.

After years of failed dialogue with the local Palestinia­n leadership, Israel’s military took matters into its own hands in November, shutting down more than a dozen factories and confiscati­ng equipment and 160 tons of wood that was to be used to produce charcoal.

Maj Gen Yoav Mordechai, who heads COGAT, the defense body responsibl­e for Palestinia­n civil affairs, said it was a matter of public health that “harms both Israelis and Palestinia­ns alike.”

Favor

But that’s not how it was received in the West Bank, where workers called it an oppressive measure that curried favor with Jewish settlers and violated previous agreements with the Palestinia­n Authority, a claim Israel denies.

Mostly, though, Palestinia­ns bemoaned the closing of an industrial site that had been operating for 50 years, with some 15 factories that provided employment for about 1,000 workers.

“We are done. We cannot bring a piece of wood here,” said Mahmoud Abu Baker, a 41-year-old owner of one of the factories. “We are losing our business and we have no alternativ­e.”

Abu Baker said he used to run 30 workshops, of which 80 percent of his product was sent to Israel, but now he had nothing left. The shutdown comes as unemployme­nt has risen to an official figure of 18 percent in the West Bank. Even those who do work tend to earn a few hundred dollars a month, a fraction of the average salary in Israel.

Yael German, an Israeli lawmaker and former health minister who has advocated against the pollution, said she was saddened at the job losses but noted Israel faced similar concerns when shutting down factories that laid off Israeli laborers too. But she said health concerns had to prevail, particular­ly with pollution the World Health Organizati­on says has a direct link to cancer and other illnesses.

“There are always conflictin­g values and it is painful to see people harmed,” she told The Associated Press. “But you cannot allow factories to pollute and break the law ... if we choose to have a healthy society there is a price to pay.”

Charcoal in Yabed is still made the old-fashioned way, with wood built like a pyramid and covered with a layer of hay followed by a layer of earth. The workers light the wood from an opening in the top and leave it burning slowly. After 15 days, they cover it with earth until it is turned into charcoal, which is later mostly used for barbeques and water pipes.

Spots

They then collect the charcoal and package it without any protection tools, like air filters, often breathing in plenty of black dust. The face of Mohammed Baker, 55, for instance, was stained with black spots. But he was more concerned about his livelihood. “If I lose my job here, I won’t find any other job,” he said.

Mordechai said a quarter of Yabed’s children and 70 percent of those in the charcoal industry have reported some form of respirator­y illness. He vowed that Israel would engage in “dialogue with the charcoal producers to find technologi­cal solutions to lower the risks of charcoal production for workers and residents.”

COGAT spokeswoma­n Hadar Horen said Mordechai has held meetings with residents. She said he hopes to find a way to reopen the factories under healthier conditions. She also said that Israel has granted thousands of work permits for Palestinia­n laborers, and that villagers were encouraged to apply for them to find alternativ­e jobs.

The Palestinia­n laborers are skeptical the Israeli overtures are genuine. Many even dismissed the health scare altogether.

“I’ve been working in the charcoal industry for 27 years, and I have no health problems at all,” said Jaser Yacoub, 42. “The government makes us do a health checkup for all workers here and they proved we were healthy.”

Also:

JERUSALEM: Israeli police questioned the wife of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday over allegation­s that the couple used public funds to cover their personal outgoings, local media reported.

“New informatio­n has reached the police according to which there is a growing evidentiar­y basis on which to prosecute Mrs Netanyahu,” Israeli public radio reported.

It said several hours of questionin­g were carried out under caution at the national police fraud squad headquarte­rs near Tel Aviv.

Media in May said police recommende­d charging Sara Netanyahu, but not her husband, in what is widely referred to as the “prime minister’s residences affair.”

“The file was passed to the Jerusalem District Prosecutor’s office in April, which in turn passed it back for completion of the investigat­ion by the police,” the daily Haaretz wrote on Thursday.

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