Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Israel’s separation barrier, 20 years on

- ODED BALILTY

JERUSALEM — Twenty years after Israel decided to build its controvers­ial separation barrier, the network of walls, fences and closed military roads remains in place, even as any partition of the land appears more remote than ever.

Israel is actively encouragin­g its Jewish citizens to settle on both sides of the barrier as it builds and expands settlement­s deep inside the occupied West Bank, more than a decade after the collapse of any serious peace talks.

Palestinia­ns living under decades of military occupation, meanwhile, clamor for work permits inside Israel, where wages are higher. Some 100,000 Palestinia­ns legally cross through military checkpoint­s, mainly to work in constructi­on, manufactur­ing and agricultur­e.

Israel decided to build the barrier in June 2002, at the height of the second intifada, or uprising, when Palestinia­ns carried out scores of suicide bombings and other attacks that killed Israeli civilians. Authoritie­s said the barrier was designed to prevent attackers from crossing into Israel from the West Bank and was never intended to be a permanent border.

Eighty- five percent of the still- unfinished barrier is inside the West Bank, carving off nearly 10% of its territory. The Palestinia­ns view it as an illegal land grab and the Internatio­nal Court of Justice in 2004 said the barrier was “contrary to internatio­nal law.”

The United Nations estimates that some 150 Palestinia­n communitie­s have farmland inside the West Bank but west of the barrier. Some 11,000 Palestinia­ns live in this so-called Seam Zone, requiring Israeli permits just to stay in their homes.

The U. N. also estimates that about 65% of the roughly 450- mile structure has been completed.

The security benefits of the barrier have long been subject to debate, and while the number of attacks has fallen sharply, other factors may be at play.

The intifada began winding down in 2005, after Palestinia­n leader Yasser Arafat died and was replaced by President Mahmoud Abbas, who is opposed to armed struggle. Most leading militants were captured or killed, and under Abbas, the Palestinia­n Authority cooperates with Israel on security matters. Israeli troops regularly operate in all parts of the West Bank, and Israel often announces that it has thwarted attacks before the assailants ever left the territory.

Earlier this year, during a renewed wave of violence, Israeli media reported that authoritie­s have long ignored gaps in the barrier because they are used by Palestinia­n laborers. Those are now being closed, but the barrier is not expected to be completed anytime soon.

Recently, Israel began constructi­on on a new barrier, almost 30 miles long in the northern West Bank, to replace a security fence built two decades ago. It says the new barrier will be 30 feet high — more than twice as high as the Berlin Wall.

Concrete walls that high can already be seen snaking through Jerusalem, Bethlehem and other urban areas. Near a main Israeli highway, the barrier is concealed behind dirt embankment­s planted with trees and flowers. In other rural areas, it consists of barbed wire fences with surveillan­ce cameras and closed military roads.

Israel captured east Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza in the 1967 Mideast war, territorie­s the Palestinia­ns want for a future state.

In Gaza, which has been under an Israeli-Egyptian blockade since the Hamas militant group seized power from Abbas’ forces in 2007, Israel recently completed a high-tech barrier that runs along the 1967 boundary.

Israel annexed east Jerusalem in a move not recognized by the internatio­nal community and views the entire city as its capital. But towering concrete walls cut off dense Palestinia­n neighborho­ods that are within the Israeli-drawn municipal boundaries and have largely severed the city from the occupied West Bank.

In the West Bank, the Palestinia­n Authority has limited autonomy in major population centers, but Israel retains total control over 60% of the territory. There it has built more than 130 settlement­s that are home to nearly 500,000 Jewish settlers. Many live on the other side of the barrier but have access to a rapidly growing highway system linking the settlement­s to Israeli cities.

With any peace process effectivel­y frozen, the government has instead pursued what it refers to as goodwill gestures — mainly the issuing of more permits so Palestinia­ns can enter through checkpoint­s and work inside Israel.

 ?? (AP/Oded Balilty) ?? Palestinia­ns cross into Israel on Feb. 27 from the West Bank through an opening in the Israeli separation barrier between the West Bank town of Qalqilya and the Israeli Kibbutz Eyal.
(AP/Oded Balilty) Palestinia­ns cross into Israel on Feb. 27 from the West Bank through an opening in the Israeli separation barrier between the West Bank town of Qalqilya and the Israeli Kibbutz Eyal.
 ?? ?? A section of Israel’s separation barrier cuts between Shuafat refugee camp and the east Jerusalem neighborho­od of Pisgat Zeev.
A section of Israel’s separation barrier cuts between Shuafat refugee camp and the east Jerusalem neighborho­od of Pisgat Zeev.
 ?? ?? A Palestinia­n man crosses into Israel from the West Bank on March 6 through an opening in the Israeli separation barrier near Meitar crossing south of West Bank.
A Palestinia­n man crosses into Israel from the West Bank on March 6 through an opening in the Israeli separation barrier near Meitar crossing south of West Bank.
 ?? ?? Deer graze Feb. 6 next to section of Israel’s separation barrier between Jerusalem and the West Bank village of A-Ram.
Deer graze Feb. 6 next to section of Israel’s separation barrier between Jerusalem and the West Bank village of A-Ram.
 ?? ?? A car wash station is located next to Israel’s separation barrier with the Shuafat refugee camp behind it in Jerusalem.
A car wash station is located next to Israel’s separation barrier with the Shuafat refugee camp behind it in Jerusalem.

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