The Borneo Post

Israeli forces take down protest huts at Bedouin village

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KHAN AL-AHMAR, West Bank: Israel security forces yesterday dismantled several shacks built by Palestinia­n protesters near Khan al-Ahmar, a Bedouin village in the occupied West Bank that Israel has slated for demolition.

Reuters witnesses said Israeli forces arrived at the village before sunrise yesterday and began taking down the newly built protest huts, without touching the Bedouin encampment, the fate of which has become a focus of Palestinia­n protests and internatio­nal concern.

An Israeli military spokesman said he did not have informatio­n to give at this time.

Khan al-Ahmar is beside an Israeli highway that runs through the West Bank from Jerusalem to the Dead Sea.

Israel’s plan to demolish the village and relocate its 180 residents — Bedouins who scrape a living by raising sheep and goats — to a site 12km away, has drawn criticism from Palestinia­ns and some European states, who cite the impact on the community and prospects for peace.

Palestinia­ns say the demolition is part of an Israeli push to create an arc of settlement­s that would effectivel­y cut off East Jerusalem from the West Bank, territorie­s Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East war and which the Palestinia­ns seek for an independen­t state.

Last week, Israel’s Supreme Court rejected petitions to prevent the move, siding with the authoritie­s who say the village was built without required permits. Palestinia­ns say such documents are impossible to obtain.

The five new huts removed by the Israelis early yesterday had been built this week by activists from several rights groups and the Western-backed Palestinia­n Authority in support of the Bedouin community. — Reuters

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