Berliner Boersenzeitung - Israeli settlements close in on West Bank herding community

EUR -
AED 4.268315
AFN 74.383357
ALL 96.069565
AMD 438.430669
ANG 2.0805
AOA 1065.770893
ARS 1610.859736
AUD 1.673089
AWG 2.093478
AZN 1.935698
BAM 1.959148
BBD 2.34037
BDT 142.928584
BGN 1.986621
BHD 0.438831
BIF 3452.593924
BMD 1.162236
BND 1.490731
BOB 8.029137
BRL 5.986915
BSD 1.162021
BTN 107.846889
BWP 15.803894
BYN 3.455699
BYR 22779.833035
BZD 2.336995
CAD 1.614201
CDF 2655.709813
CHF 0.921212
CLF 0.027081
CLP 1069.176055
CNY 8.003798
CNH 7.989352
COP 4292.824668
CRC 540.253562
CUC 1.162236
CUP 30.799264
CVE 110.453301
CZK 24.521619
DJF 206.924337
DKK 7.471925
DOP 69.912194
DZD 154.160064
EGP 62.369209
ERN 17.433546
ETB 181.439465
FJD 2.623631
FKP 0.881558
GBP 0.871857
GEL 3.12639
GGP 0.881558
GHS 12.782506
GIP 0.881558
GMD 86.005571
GNF 10190.372536
GTQ 8.889154
GYD 243.198205
HKD 9.108923
HNL 30.867952
HRK 7.534319
HTG 152.529218
HUF 382.522792
IDR 19647.605993
ILS 3.645296
IMP 0.881558
INR 108.30288
IQD 1522.160462
IRR 1529357.795973
ISK 144.210321
JEP 0.881558
JMD 183.773297
JOD 0.823989
JPY 184.137177
KES 151.204654
KGS 101.637389
KHR 4649.205977
KMF 498.025366
KPW 1045.946896
KRW 1753.942231
KWD 0.359514
KYD 0.968409
KZT 552.401734
LAK 25609.090581
LBP 104057.817263
LKR 366.304475
LRD 213.22635
LSL 19.51547
LTL 3.431782
LVL 0.703025
LYD 7.411635
MAD 10.854405
MDL 20.469129
MGA 4916.656884
MKD 61.675934
MMK 2441.168262
MNT 4152.347734
MOP 9.382241
MRU 46.357029
MUR 54.381217
MVR 17.979526
MWK 2014.939086
MXN 20.706462
MYR 4.680306
MZN 74.32517
NAD 19.516311
NGN 1605.420575
NIO 42.764376
NOK 11.247845
NPR 172.555565
NZD 2.014254
OMR 0.446881
PAB 1.162046
PEN 4.043032
PGK 5.025481
PHP 69.946895
PKR 324.211215
PLN 4.280086
PYG 7546.800845
QAR 4.236686
RON 5.09652
RSD 117.423041
RUB 93.499543
RWF 1700.601609
SAR 4.36268
SBD 9.346748
SCR 16.101667
SDG 698.503739
SEK 10.890042
SGD 1.489417
SHP 0.871978
SLE 28.532786
SLL 24371.528338
SOS 664.072106
SRD 43.425788
STD 24055.946507
STN 24.54332
SVC 10.167333
SYP 128.714546
SZL 19.509435
THB 37.748856
TJS 11.111665
TMT 4.07945
TND 3.410986
TOP 2.798386
TRY 51.69999
TTD 7.886921
TWD 37.146187
TZS 3010.191905
UAH 50.847466
UGX 4328.528243
USD 1.162236
UYU 47.230519
UZS 14115.063345
VES 550.060735
VND 30607.49505
VUV 139.75194
WST 3.22836
XAF 657.116829
XAG 0.015374
XAU 0.000244
XCD 3.141002
XCG 2.09407
XDR 0.826295
XOF 657.071521
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.367942
ZAR 19.48344
ZMK 10461.519739
ZMW 22.397436
ZWL 374.23964
  • GSK

    1.0800

    56.27

    +1.92%

  • CMSD

    0.1350

    22.235

    +0.61%

  • CMSC

    0.1500

    22.05

    +0.68%

  • BCE

    0.1850

    25.425

    +0.73%

  • BCC

    -0.0800

    75.77

    -0.11%

  • RIO

    1.7750

    95.065

    +1.87%

  • BTI

    -0.9700

    57.5

    -1.69%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • NGG

    1.9700

    86.57

    +2.28%

  • AZN

    3.8000

    201.02

    +1.89%

  • RYCEF

    0.4000

    15.45

    +2.59%

  • RELX

    0.2300

    33.38

    +0.69%

  • VOD

    0.0950

    15.115

    +0.63%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    12.44

    +1.13%

  • BP

    -1.1100

    45.89

    -2.42%

Israeli settlements close in on West Bank herding community
Israeli settlements close in on West Bank herding community / Photo: JOHN WESSELS - AFP

Israeli settlements close in on West Bank herding community

In the occupied West Bank's Jordan Valley, Naef Jahaleen fears for the future as Israeli settlers come for the land home to one of the area's last Bedouin herding communities.

Text size:

Life was good before in Ras Ein Al-Auja, the Bedouin herder says, but settlement outposts have grown one after the other over the past two years.

Settlers' trailers have gradually given way to houses with foundations, some built just 100 metres (109 yards) from Bedouin homes.

In May, settlers diverted the village's most precious resource -- the spring after which it is named.

But for the community of 130 families, the worst issue is the constant need to stand guard to avoid settlers cutting power and irrigation pipes, or bringing their own herds to graze near people's houses.

"The settlers provoke people at night, walking around the houses, disturbing the residents, making people anxious, scaring the children and the elderly," 49-year-old Jahaleen said, adding that calling the Israeli police in the area rarely yielded results.

"There's no real protection," he said.

"A settler could come to your house -- you call the police, and they don't come. The army doesn't come. No one helps," Jahaleen told AFP after a meeting with other villagers trying to coordinate their response.

- Land grabs -

Most Palestinian Bedouins are herders, which leaves them particularly exposed to violence when Israeli settlers bring herds that compete for grazing land.

It is a strategy that settlement watchdog organisations call "pastoral colonialism".

"They have started to bring in Jewish colonisers and give them some small herd or a few sheep or cows and take over a specific area. From there, this armed coloniser starts to herd," Younes Ara, of the Palestinian Authority's Colonization and Wall Resistance Commission, told AFP.

Settlements have expanded since Israel occupied the West Bank in 1967, with more than 500,000 settlers living in the Palestinian territory, excluding Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem. Some three million Palestinians live in the territory.

Jahaleen said Israeli herding, combined with repeated harassment, aimed to make Palestinians leave an area.

"You never know when or how they'll harass you. The goal is to make you leave," Jahaleen said as he stood guard near his home one night, occasionally flashing a powerful torch up a gully near where young settlers had been bringing supplies.

That night, Jahaleen was joined on his watch by Doron Meinrath, a former army officer who sometimes leads volunteers for an Israeli organisation called Looking the Occupation in the Eye.

Several foreign and Israeli activists help Jahaleen by standing watch, documenting settlers' moves, calling the Israeli police or army, and trying to deter violence with their presence, taking turns for eight-hour shifts day and night.

"Let's go after them," Meinrath said as he saw a car drive down a hill on an illegal road finished last winter that connects the nascent Israeli outpost to a formal settlement.

All Israeli settlements in the West Bank are deemed illegal by the United Nations under international law.

Once caught up with the young man's Toyota -- which was missing a headlight and had a cracked windscreen -- Meinrath marked down the number plate and reported it to the police as a vehicle unsafe for the road.

His aim was to get the vehicle impounded, in a bid to slow further land grabs.

- Changing times -

Even with the inexorable growth of settler outposts, Meinrath said he felt organisations such as his posed "a problem" for the settler movement.

Although he had always been left-wing, Meinrath said his opinions fortified as he saw Israel change and the settlement movement become stronger politically.

Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and other members of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's cabinet openly call for the West Bank's annexation, and more specifically that of the Jordan Valley.

Abu Taleb, a 75-year-old herder from Ras Ein Al-Auja, said he saw the land he was born on change, too.

Nestled between rocky hills to the west and the flat Jordan Valley that climbs up the Jordanian plateau to the east, his community used to be self-sufficient.

But since settlers cut off access to the spring, he and his sons must pay to refill the water tank they need to quench their sheep's thirst every three days.

After another settlement outpost sprang up a stone's throw from his home, Taleb must now also bring his sheep into their pen when settlers arrive with their own herd, for fear of violence.

"My life as a child was good. But now, their lives are not good," he said, pointing to three of his grandchildren milling around under the shade of a lonely acacia tree.

"They grew up in a bad life. These kids are afraid of the settlers everywhere."

(Y.Yildiz--BBZ)