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“Facts
on the Ground”
Western
Coverage of the Wall & the Settlements
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The
wall may reach up to 480 kilometers, confiscating farm
land and blocking thousands of Palestinians from places of
work, study or health care.
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In recent weeks Sharon’s
Israel
has given the go ahead for over 600 hundred new settler homes and the
latest stage
of the
West Bank
wall. But no, I didn’t get these facts from a visit to the
West Bank, but by sitting in my
UK
home and reading the British newspapers. Sure there have always
been mainstream journalists who understand something of the
wider picture in the
Middle East, but Sharon
is making it steadily easier for them to convey this picture to
the British public.
While the image of
bloodstained victims of the Haifa bombing are shown to the
British reader/viewer, anyone who read the papers earlier would
have known of the context in which a 29 year-old woman might
choose to cause such death and carnage. Any reader with critical
faculties might connect the fact that this young woman came from
a bantustan enclosed by ever increasing settlements, surrounded
by high walls and watchtowers with no hope of escape in the
future.
Israel presents new stage of wall, gives go-ahead to 600 new
settler homes
While settlements have doubled throughout the
Oslo
period, and Labor’s Barak authorized more settlement building
around
Jerusalem
than did Likud’s Netanyahu,
Sharon
does the least to try and hide it. Many Palestinians have told
me that they prefer
Sharon
in the Prime Minister’s chair than any Labor leader. At least
he makes no attempt to hide what he is doing; western
journalists have not had to conduct detailed investigations to
find out exactly what is going on.
The
wall is not a border between
Israel
and a future Palestinian state; it is part of an attempt
to destroy any viable state for the future. |
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First came the Israeli cabinet approval of the next phase of the
West Bank
wall, which would lead to further confiscations of Palestinian
land. This is in spite of international outcry, including public
criticism from staunch allies like the US. The next stage could well see barriers going as far as 24
kilometers into the
West Bank, which supports the conclusion that this is not a border
between Israel
and a future Palestinian state, but part of the ongoing Israeli
policy of destroying any viable state for the future. Around 145
kilometers of the barrier has already been built in the north west
of the
West Bank
and about 50 kilometers of fence is materializing in
Jerusalem. Current indications suggest that the wall, a maze of concrete
slabs, barbed wire and electric fences may reach up to 480
kilometers, not only confiscating farm land, but blocking tens
of thousands of Palestinians from places of work, study or
health care.
The following day Israel
published tenders for 604 new homes in West Bank
settlements, which is in direct contravention of the Road Map.
An advertisement in the so-called “liberal” daily newspaper Ha’aretz,
invited construction firms to bid for building contracts.
Negotiators have always hotly disputed the term “natural
growth” but Israel
continues to insist that such building is only necessary
extension for demographic reasons. Few make mention of the large
number of empty settlement homes. In several years working in Palestine, it was not a statistic I ever managed to get hold of, but
journalistic investigations indicate that many settler homes,
used to justify a large military presence, remain empty.
And thus some of the articles and editorials that appeared in
the British press were pretty close to the mark.
[T]he wall being built by the government of Ariel Sharon is
wrong. It is wrong because it puts beyond reach any conceivable
solution to the century-old question of Palestine. It is also wrong because purely as a matter of security it
simply will not work. The barrier, moreover, has nothing
whatsoever to do with the pursuit of a “two states” outcome
to the crisis, in which Israelis would get security behind
internationally recognised boundaries and the Palestinians would
get an independent state, albeit a very small one…
…the biggest increase in this creeping takeover of Palestinian land occurred during the peace process. The new wall now carves out more land from the territories. Furthermore, if the sole intention of the barrier were to keep out suicide bombers, Israel presumably would not have had to seize the little remaining arable land the Palestinians have left.”
Financial Times editorial, October 2
Israeli
policy is making it harder for an intelligent journalist to
rave in their defense. |
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This insightful analysis comes not in a small radical
publication, but in a
London
mainstream daily, the Financial Times. On the same day in
the Independent, writer Adrian Hamilton contributes the
following on the wall; “It's a compromise that should fool
nobody. To all intents and purposes the wall means the end of
the road map to peace, and it is dishonest of the Israeli
government to pretend otherwise.” Chris McGreal in the Guardian,
Justin Huggler in the Independent and across the water,
Greg Myre in the New York Times, have all frequently
contributed quality reporting on developments in the West Bank.
While
many media outlets keep harping on about the road map alongside
readers’ polls as to whether or not it can still be revived,
there are also other strands of argument finally surfacing. Two
years ago I rarely heard the argument about the possibility of a
one state democracy for Jews and Palestinians beyond “radical
fringe” discussion. Now even Thomas Friedman was prepared to
admit that facing up to the end of the road map might lead to a
new stage, where human rights campaigners are leading a “one
person, one state, one vote” anti-apartheid style campaign.
Mainstream newspapers are giving space to commentators who
reflect on a potential one state future (whether a position of
advocating for, or merely resignation to the possibility).
Before any readers call me naïve, I am not denying that the
majority of what comes across in the mainstream British media
about the
Middle East
remains dross. The newspapers are sadly still full of nonsense,
whether ill informed or plain propaganda. But Israeli policy is
making it harder and harder for an intelligent journalist to
rave wholly in their defense. The coverage of settlement
building and imprisonment of an indigenous race is making it
harder and harder for a British person to defend his or her
guilt-free “Gosh, I didn’t know” approach to the
Palestinian catastrophe. The truth at one time or another is
there in the broadsheet newspaper open on your breakfast table.
Just look for it.
Isabelle
Humphries is researching the situation for Palestinian
refugees living inside the 1948 borders. She has an MA in
Middle East
Politics and has worked for three years with Palestinian NGOs,
and as a freelance writer, on both sides of the 1967 border. You
can reach her at innazareth@yahoo.co.uk
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