Daily Trust Sunday

Israel opens ‘apartheid road’ in occupied West Bank

- Source: Al Jazeera News

Anew segregated road separates Palestinia­n and Israeli traffic between the villages of Anata and Azzayim. Anata, occupied West Bank A newly-opened highway in the occupied West Bank has been hailed by Israelis but condemned by Palestinia­ns, who are calling it “Apartheid Road”.

It’s the first operationa­l section of an eastern ring road around Jerusalem that could deny Palestinia­ns access to parts of the West Bank and threaten a future Palestinia­n state.

Route 4370 has a high wall in the middle, topped with fencing that segregates the road into two separate two-way lanes.

The western side is for Palestinia­ns in the West Bank to use to go around Jerusalem, which they cannot enter without an Israeli military-issued permit, while the eastern side serves Israeli settlers going to and from Jerusalem.

Palestinia­ns from the village of Anata, which lies on the outskirts of Jerusalem but is separated from the city by Israel’s barrier wall, say part of the highway is built on Anata’s land. ‘They want to take that land’ “Anyone can see the Israelis’ plan,” said resident Ahmed Rifea. “A few months ago they wanted to take Khan al-Ahmar,” Khan al-Ahmar is the Bedouin village that garnered internatio­nal attention after the Israeli government issued a demolition order against it. “Now they build this new road? They want to take that land,” Rifea said.

Originally encompassi­ng 35,000 square-kilometres of land, Anata has shrunk to a little more than 1,000 square-km because more than 90 percent of it lies in Area C as agreed by the Oslo Accords, putting it under total Israeli civil and security control.

The Rifea family owns hundreds of dunams (tens of hectares) of land in Anata, but almost all of it has been confiscate­d by Israel for road and illegal Jewish settlement constructi­on. E-1 and ‘Greater Jerusalem’ Route 4370 runs northeast of Jerusalem past Khan al-Ahmar and the illegal Jewish settlement of Maale Adumim - in a controvers­ial area known as E-1, which lies on the eastern outskirts of Jerusalem.

Israeli authoritie­s want to annex E-1 as part of their “Greater Jerusalem” plan to redraw the borders of the city - Khan al-Ahmar stands in the way, which may be why Israel ordered it demolished.

Expanding Jerusalem further east would create room for more settlement growth, connect Maale Adumim to the city as a suburb and ease the housing crisis for Jewish Israelis in Jerusalem.

The annexation of E-1 would also displace about 140,000 Palestinia­ns living in East Jerusalem towns and villages, like Anata.

Moreover, it would continue Israel’s fragmentat­ion of the West Bank by bisecting the northern Palestinia­n cities from the south, making any potential future state of Palestine less viable. A ‘gift’ from Israel According to the Coordinato­r of Government Activities in the Territorie­s (COGAT) spokespers­on’s office, “The constructi­on of the new road was intended to shorten and optimise travel times for Palestinia­n residents of Judea and Samaria,” - using the biblical name for the West Bank.

Israel Afrayat, transporta­tion coordinato­r for the Israeli civil administra­tion, appeared in a promotiona­l video explaining the purpose of the new road and why Israel has “gifted” it to the Palestinia­ns.

The road is meant to “serve all people,” Afrayat said in the video, which is published on the Arabic language Facebook page of COGAT.

“Our goal is safety first - to protect your children,” Afrayat said.

Representa­tives in both the Palestinia­n Ministry of Public Works and Housing and the Ministry of Transporta­tion said they were not notified and had no informatio­n about the opening of the new road.

“The main purpose of this road is to connect Maale Adumim with Jerusalem and to separate Palestinia­ns from their land, especially people from Anata,” Jihad Shobaki, an officer at the Palestinia­n Ministry of Public Works and Housing, told Al Jazeera.

Israeli activist group Ir Amim agreed and said the highway “eliminates one of the obstacles to settlement constructi­on in E-1 and should signal cause for heightened vigilance.”

According to Ir Amim, the northernmo­st part of “Apartheid Road” was always intended to “solve” the dilemma of maintainin­g at least transporta­tion contiguity between northern Palestinia­ns cities and the south while diverting them from the E-1 and Jerusalem areas.

The highway was initially conceived more than a decade ago by late Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. Internatio­nal pressure delayed constructi­on for years.

Rifea said he found out about the road being opened through the COGAT Facebook page. Other Anata residents learned through the notice distribute­d to them by COGAT stating that it is forbidden to build on their own land within 300 metres of the new road.

“If they close the road, they shut off people from their land. As always, when Israelis open one thing, they close another,” Shobaki said.

“In the end, we will use [the road]. What can we do?” Rifea said.

 ??  ?? The apartheid road dividing Israel and Palestinia­ns
The apartheid road dividing Israel and Palestinia­ns

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