The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

At West Bank outpost, Israeli settlers defy law

Palestinia­ns view settlement­s as main obstacle to peace, but in ever more hawkish Israel, they enjoy wide support.

- By Joseph Krauss Associated Press

The Jewish settlement of Homesh, built on privately owned Palestinia­n land deep inside the occupied West Bank, was dismantled in 2005 and cannot be rebuilt. At least, that’s what Israeli law says. But when a group of settlers drove up to the site last week, they were waved through army checkpoint­s that were closed to Palestinia­n vehicles and arrived at a cluster of tents on the windy hilltop. There, dozens of settlers were studying in a makeshift yeshiva, or religious school.

Empty wine bottles and bags of trash stood out for collection, the remains of a holiday feast attended by hundreds of settlers the night before and documented on social media.

What’s happening

The settlers’ ability to maintain a presence at Homesh, guarded by a detachment of Israeli soldiers, is a vivid display of the power of the settler movement nearly 55 years after Israel captured the West Bank in the 1967 Mideast war.

Their strength has also been on display in a wave of attacks against Palestinia­ns and Israeli peace activists in recent months, many in plain view of Israeli soldiers, who appear unable or unwilling to stop them, despite Israeli officials’ promises to maintain law and order. The worst of the violence has been linked to hard-line settler outposts like Homesh.

That Israeli authoritie­s have not cleared Homesh — which under Israeli law is blatantly illegal — makes it nearly impossible to imagine the removal of any of Israel’s 130 officially authorized settlement­s as part of any future peace deal. Nearly 500,000 settlers now live in those settlement­s, as well as dozens of unauthoriz­ed outposts like Homesh.

What it means

The Palestinia­ns view the settlement­s as the main obstacle to any two-state solution to the century-old conflict, and most countries view them as a violation of internatio­nal law. But in an increasing­ly hawkish Israel, the settlers enjoy wide support.

“We are privileged, thank God, to live here and study Torah, and we shall continue to do so with God’s help,” said Rabbi Menachem Ben Shachar, a teacher at the yeshiva.

“The people of Israel need to hold onto Homesh, to study Torah here and in every other place in the Land of Israel,” he said, using a biblical term for what is today Israel and the West Bank.

Israel dismantled the settlement in 2005 as part of its withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, and the law prohibits Israeli citizens from entering the area. Israel’s Supreme Court has acknowledg­ed that the land belongs to Palestinia­ns from the nearby village of Burqa.

But the settlers have repeatedly returned, setting up tents and other structures on the foundation­s of former homes, now overgrown with weeds.

The army has demolished the structures on several occasions but more often tolerates their presence. The Jan. 16 party was just the latest in a series of marches, political rallies and other gatherings held at the site over the years, some attended by Israeli lawmakers.

The Israeli military said in a statement that it did not approve the event and took steps to prevent civilians from reaching the area, including setting up checkpoint­s. The settlers appear to have walked around them. The military declined to discuss the larger issues around Homesh, and a government spokeswoma­n declined to comment.

The killing of a yeshiva student by a Palestinia­n gunman near the outpost last month has become a rallying cry for

the settlers, who say evacuating Homesh now would amount to appeasing terrorism. But the survival of the outpost after 16 years is rooted in a deeper shift in Israel that makes it nearly impossible to rein in even the settlers’ most brazen activities.

Israel’s parliament is dominated by parties that support the settlers. The current government, a fragile coalition reliant on factions from across the political spectrum, knows that any major confrontat­ion with the settlers could spell its demise. Prime Minister Naftali Bennett is a former settler leader and is opposed to Palestinia­n statehood.

Recent developmen­ts

Over the weekend, masked settlers descended on another village in the northern West Bank, attacked a group of Palestinia­ns and Israeli peace activists with stones and clubs, and set a car on fire. Israel’s public security minister, Omer Barlev, called the attackers “terrorists” but said police have struggled to catch them because they flee before authoritie­s arrive.

The owners of the land where Homesh was built risk being attacked by settlers if they try to access it. Yesh Din, an Israeli rights group that represents the residents of Burqa in court, has documented at least 20 attacks and seven incidents of property damage since 2017.

A 15-year-old Palestinia­n said he was kidnapped and tortured by settlers in August. Six farmers were hospitaliz­ed after settlers attacked them with metal batons and stones in November, according to B’tselem, another Israeli rights group.

Ben Shachar, the teacher at the yeshiva, said farmers should coordinate their entry with the Israeli military. He said he’s open

to dialogue with “any Arab who accepts that the Land of Israel belongs to the Jewish people,” but that terrorism is “part of the DNA of Arab society.”

Yesh Din is currently petitionin­g the Supreme Court on behalf of the Palestinia­ns, hoping it will pressure authoritie­s to remove the outpost and allow them to access their land.

“It’s a funny petition, right?” said Lior Amihai, the director of Yesh Din. “We have a petition to enable Palestinia­ns to enter their land, but according to the law they (already) have access to their land.”

Ghalib Hajah, who was born and raised in Burqa and now runs a prosperous constructi­on firm inside Israel, is putting the finishing touches on what he had hoped would be a quiet country home for him and his wife. The balconies look out over rolling hills and olive terraces.

The day after the yeshiva student was killed, a group of settlers pelted Hajah’s house with stones, shattering several of the newly installed windows as well as tiles from Italy stacked outside. Others smashed gravestone­s in the village cemetery.

“I hid inside, like a thief in my own house,” he said. “It’s not the first time they’ve been here. ... Before you leave your house, you have to see whether there are settlers outside. They block the roads; they throw stones at cars.”

He and other residents say settlers have attacked the village on more than a dozen occasions in recent years, with the army appearing powerless to stop them.

Instead, he has turned his new home into a fortress, with cameras mounted on the roof and heavy aluminum shutters on all windows and doors.

“There’s no stability here,” he said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ARIEL SCHALIT/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Palestinia­n village of Burqa sits below an Israeli flag flying Jan. 17 in the Jewish West Bank outpost of Homesh. Palestinia­n residents of Burqa say the settlers’ continued presence in Homesh, officially dismantled in 2005, makes it difficult to access their land and move safely in and out of their village. Yesh Din, an Israeli rights group that represents residents of Burqa in court, has documented at least 20 attacks and seven incidents of property damage since 2017.
PHOTOS BY ARIEL SCHALIT/ASSOCIATED PRESS The Palestinia­n village of Burqa sits below an Israeli flag flying Jan. 17 in the Jewish West Bank outpost of Homesh. Palestinia­n residents of Burqa say the settlers’ continued presence in Homesh, officially dismantled in 2005, makes it difficult to access their land and move safely in and out of their village. Yesh Din, an Israeli rights group that represents residents of Burqa in court, has documented at least 20 attacks and seven incidents of property damage since 2017.

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