Thursday, 5 November 2020

DOZENS DISPLACED IN LARGEST DEMOLITION JOB ON THE WEST BANK IN YEARS

 

Dozens displaced in largest demolition in years in the West Bank, reports UN relief office

UNRWA/Lara Jonasdottir
Bedouin boys living in Jabal al-Baba in the remains of their family’s home which was demolished in 2017. (file photo)
    
5 November 2020

Seventy-three people, including 41 children have been displaced after Israeli authorities demolished their homes and other structures, and destroyed belongings in the Palestinian community of Humsa Al Bqai’a in the West Bank, the UN humanitarian wing has reported. 

According to the UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), 76 structures were demolished, on Tuesday, more than in any other single demolition in the past decade.  

The destroyed properties – including homes, animal shelters, latrines and solar panels – were essential to, livelihoods, wellbeing and dignity of community members, whose rights have been violated, Yvonne Helle, Humanitarian Coordinator ad interim for the occupied Palestinian territory, said in a statement on Wednesday. 

“Their vulnerability is further compounded by the onset of winter and the ongoing COVID-19pandemic,” she said, adding that some of the demolished structures had been donated as humanitarian assistance. 

According to OCHA, so far in 2020, 689 structures have been demolished across the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, more than in any full year since 2016, leaving 869 Palestinians homeless. 

The lack of Israeli-issued building permits is typically cited as a reason, even though, due to the restrictive and discriminatory planning regime, Palestinians can almost never obtain such permits, said Ms. Helle. 

“Demolitions are a key means of creating an environment designed to coerce Palestinians to leave their homes,” she added. 

Some of the most vulnerable communities  

Located in the Jordan Valley, Humsa Al Bqai’a is one of 38 Bedouin and herding communities partially or fully located within areas declared as “firing zones” by Israel for military training. They are some of the most vulnerable communities in the West Bank, with limited access to education and health services, and to water, sanitation and electricity infrastructure, according to OCHA. 

In the statement, Ms. Helle reminded all parties that the “extensive destruction of property and the forcible transfer of protected people in an occupied territory are grave breaches of the Fourth Geneva Convention.  

“While assuring that the humanitarian community stands ready to support all those who have been displaced or otherwise affected, I strongly reiterate our call to Israel to immediately halt unlawful demolitions,” she added. 

 

 

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