Gulf News

Palestinia­n evictions a human rights crisis

Villagers in Susiya and the Bedouin are some of the West Bank’s most vulnerable communitie­s. Their fate is in the hands of the UN Security Council

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bu Jihad, a Susiya village elder, waits anxiously. His home in the south Hebron hills of the West Bank faces demolition for the third time.

Legal options are running out as Israeli authoritie­s proceed with their plans to forcibly evict half the village. Global opinion and pressure have helped keep the bulldozers at bay this time around. So far.

The Palestinia­n herder community of Susiya was forced out of its century-old village in 1986. Israel declared the area an archaeolog­ical site and then handed it over to Israeli colonists. The villagers moved into tents and caves on their own farmland, but were evicted from there as well by the Israeli army in 1991. No reasons were given. They now live on another part of their farmland, sandwiched between a hostile Israeli colony and one of its outposts.

For several decades now, the villagers of Susiya have lived under the constant threat of becoming homeless once again. Mass demolition of their homes and forced evictions took place in 2001 and 2011. Israel claims it has no planning permits to build on the farmland, but at the same time makes it impossible for Palestinia­ns to obtain permits. Residents of Susiya have applied for permits over the years but each applicatio­n is met with rejection.

Every week somewhere in the West Bank a family watches while their home is demolished by bulldozers.

Susiya’s plight is not an exception. In addition, more than 46 Bedouin communitie­s in the central West Bank — around 7,000 Palestinia­ns — face Israeli pressure to leave their homes. These are among the most vulnerable people in Palestine. Most of them are Palestinia­n refugees, forced out following the 1948 Arab-Israeli war.

Israel wants much of this land in Palestine for its own colonies — which the internatio­nal court of justice and the UN Security Council have repeatedly said are illegal.

Not surprising­ly, the communitie­s are resisting their expulsion, knowing that without their land, they lose everything. But the Israeli authoritie­s are fighting hard to remove them: the Bedouin are not permitted to build anything on this land — not a hut, school, kindergart­en or health clinic — and are denied access to essential services such as electricit­y and water, on land they have inhabited for generation­s.

Every week somewhere in the West Bank a family watches while their home is demolished by bulldozers. In 2016 there has been a dramatic rise in forced evictions across the West Bank. The Israeli authoritie­s have already demolished 793 structures — the highest on record — with 1,218 Palestinia­ns, including 568 children, becoming homeless.

When help is offered, the donations of tents, water tanks and children’s play equipment are seized or destroyed. Access to grazing land and markets, essential for these herding communitie­s to earn a living, is restricted, irreparabl­y damaging their way of life. The aim and effect of this coercive environmen­t is clear — to make life for Palestinia­ns on the land unliveable.

When political actions have egregious human rights results they must be addressed as matters of human rights. For Palestinia­n Bedouin and herder communitie­s, violation of the right to adequate housing and to be free from homelessne­ss and its grave repercussi­ons is a daily threat and a common reality, with no end in sight and no access to effective recourse or remedy.

Inadequate responses

Two years ago, along with four other United Nations independen­t human rights experts appointed by the human rights council, I raised the case of the Bedouin with the Israeli government. We urged them to halt the plans to forcibly transfer these already vulnerable people — a serious violation of internatio­nal law. Despite the seriousnes­s of our concerns, we received inadequate responses and not only have the plans not been halted, the situation has worsened: demolition­s of their structures have increased threefold.

The Bedouins and the villagers of Susiya have been let down by the internatio­nal community in the past. Their rights to adequate housing and to non-discrimina­tion have been systematic­ally ignored. On Monday, the Security Council heard about the serious plight of these communitie­s from the UN’s special envoy to the region.

The internatio­nal community must recognise the grave human rights implicatio­ns of Israel’s plan to forcibly evict and transfer these communitie­s.

Abu Jihad, the other residents of Susiya village and the Bedouin are looking to world leaders to recognise their equal membership in the human family, and to act decisively to guarantee their right to adequate housing and to non-discrimina­tion.

Leilani Farha is the special rapporteur on the right to housing, appointed by the United Nations Human Rights Council. She is also the executive director of Canada Without Poverty, an NGO based in Ottawa, Canada.

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