Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University -
Thabet Abu Rass
(Dept of
Geography) among the Gaggle of anti-Israel Activists trying to
help the Bedouins Seize Control of the Negev illegally
The director of Adalah's Negev bureau, Dr.
Thabet Abu Rass, commented on the decision, saying that "achieving
recognition by the European Parliament that the Israeli government
practices the same policies of displacement and dispossession
against Palestinian citizens of Israel as it does against
Palestinians living under occupation is a tremendous step forward."
…
All the usual suspects, NGOs which work to weaken the State
of Israel in their so-called post-Zionist world, such as Adalah,
Rabbis for Human Rights, Bimkom and ACRI, back the Beduin claims.
They not only support the usurping of land, they take clear aim at
pillars of our Zionist establishment such as the JNF, which they
claim is a racist, colonial entity that should be shut down....Their
goal for the Beduin is no less than the establishment of facts on
the ground, as Pnini Badash – the mayor of Omer states, "to create
an autonomous region" that will eventually be contiguous with the
oft-promised Palestinian state to be created only a few kilometers
to the north.
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Op-EdContributors/Article.aspx?id=283964
Tower and Stockade settlements – Version 2.0
One would think
that there are various ministries whose job it is today to ensure
that new towns are properly planned and established.
By ARI BRIGGS
05/09/2012
In the middle of the Arab uprising of
1936, the Jewish settlement of Kfar Hittim in the Galilee was
established, on 2,000 dunams (200 hectares) of land which the Jewish
National Fund had purchased in 1905.
David Ben-Gurion, who was then the head of
the Jewish Yishuv, gave his tacit approval, as long as it could be
completed in one day, and the plan was carried out.
The purpose of the settlement, and others
like it, was to establish facts on the ground, to ensure that
Jewish-owned land would be included in the future State of Israel.
Those were tough days. Arab gangs were
intent on killing as many Jews as possible and wreaking havoc in
order to convince the British to limit Jewish immigration. Kfar
Hittim was the first of many Tower & Stockade settlements, so called
because those were the first two building constructed on the land,
in order to protect the brave pioneers who would dwell there. It was
successfully defended on its first evening against Arab gangs.
Seventy-six years later, and with a
sovereign government in place in Israel, one would think that there
are various ministries whose job it is today to ensure that new
towns are properly planned and established, and that it is the job
of the IDF to defend them.
Well, not exactly. Today, in the Negev,
one doesn't have to travel very far off the beaten track to find new
Beduin settlements.
But these settlements follow their own
rules. Unlike the case of Kfar Hittim, no Beduin National Fund
purchased the land. The residents just took it. Whether it is
privately owned Jewish land, as in the case of Al Zarnoog, or Bir El
Daj, built on JNF lands or state lands, doesn't matter to them.
The Beduin understand that their
communities must also have means of defense, but their "Tower &
Stockade" is not physical. It's virtual, but very effective.
Their protective "Stockade" consists of
NGOs such as the Negev Coexistence Forum (NCF), Adalah, ACRI and the
like. Their virtual Towers are the New Israel Fund (NIF), the EU and
the UN, all of which are extremely well-funded and focused on
protecting the "rights" of the Beduin to the lands on which they
have built illegally.
One only has to visit the NCF website to
see how effective their virtual defensive wall is: Entry of
18.05.12: British ambassador learns about NCF, visits Al Arakib. NCF
Statement at UN Forum on Indigenous Issues.
28.05.12: UN Special Rapporteur on
Indigenous Rights vows to pressure Israel on Arab- Beduin rights
violations.
28.06.12: NCF participates in conference in Sweden.
15.07.12: NCF activities in Umm-Mitnan, Al Arakib mark two years
since first demolition.
21.07.12: NCF submits report to UN Human Rights Council.
28.07.12: South African ambassador visits Al Arakib.
For its part, Israel has developed
generous programs to regularize Beduin settlement in the Negev,
through the Goldberg Commission, established in 2007, and the Prawer
Committee, whose role is to implement the Commission's
recommendations.
The Prawer plan calls for the legalizing
of at least half of the illegal Beduin settlements established in
the Negev. For those 30,000 Beduin whose settlements cannot be
legalized, it offers generous gifts of land of up to 5 dunams per
person, thus rewarding illegal behavior with private land in the
land registry.
But of course, this generous offer of the
Israeli government to appease illegal Beduin settlers, costing
billions of shekels to implement, is not enough for their NGO
allies. They demand that every Beduin land claim be legalized, or,
as Clinton Bailey writing in Haaretz, put it: "Get ready for a
Beduin uprising."
Adalah, NCF and other NGO's ignore
Israel's democratic process and have taken their virtual "wall of
defense" for illegal Beduin settlements to the international arena.
And their campaign against Israel has borne fruit. Last month, the
European Parliament passed a resolution condemning Israel's policy
toward the Beduin communities living in "unrecognized settlements"
in the Negev Desert.
The European Parliament had never before
addressed the situation of the Beduin citizens of Israel. It took
Adalah, with the massive backing of their virtual "Tower," the NIF,
EU and the UN, to get the job done right. The director of Adalah's
Negev bureau, Dr. Thabet Abu Rass, commented on the decision, saying
that "achieving recognition by the European Parliament that the
Israeli government practices the same policies of displacement and
dispossession against Palestinian citizens of Israel as it does
against Palestinians living under occupation is a tremendous step
forward."
With full intention to interfere in the
internal workings of Israel's democratically elected government and
judicial system, another clause of the European Parliament's
resolution stated: "The European Parliament calls for the protection
of the Beduin communities of the West Bank and in the Negev, and for
their rights to be fully respected by the Israeli authorities, and
condemns any violations [e.g. house demolitions, forced
displacements, public service limitations]; calls also, in this
context, for the withdrawal of the Prawer Plan by the Israeli
government."
All the usual suspects, NGOs which work to
weaken the State of Israel in their so-called post-Zionist world,
such as Adalah, Rabbis for Human Rights, Bimkom and ACRI, back the
Beduin claims. They not only support the usurping of land, they take
clear aim at pillars of our Zionist establishment such as the JNF,
which they claim is a racist, colonial entity that should be shut
down.
In ACRI's Beduin Policy brief, their
solution is simple. It states: "Today there are 45 Beduin
settlements in the Negev where anywhere from between 400 and 4,800
people reside. They meet all the objective planning criteria for
recognition, including permanent population, population size, number
of resident adults, and number of residential units."
Thus, not only do they call for the
legalizing of all the Beduin settlements with no other compromise
possible, they speak of a "reasonable" number of 45 such illegal
settlements.
Regavim, in its presentation to the
Goldberg Commission, showed proof that in actual fact there are
2,100 separate settlements covering over 800,000 dunams (80,000
hectares). The Commission accepted Regavim's empirical data and thus
decided not to approve all the Beduin and their supporters' demands.
As can be seen in the satellite imagery
used by Regavim incorporating Geographical Information System (GIS)
data, the yellow dots are the so-called 45 unrecognized Beduin
settlements. What is striking is how these yellow dots are in many
cases not representative of Beduin settlement in the Negev,
signified by the red areas By their use of false and misleading maps
and information, the defenders of the Beduin land grab continue to
garner support internationally.
Their goal for the Beduin is no less than
the establishment of facts on the ground, as Pnini Badash – the
mayor of Omer states, "to create an autonomous region" that will
eventually be contiguous with the oft-promised Palestinian state to
be created only a few kilometers to the north.
The government cannot permit the financial
and political power of the virtual tower and stockade to undermine
the sovereignty of the State of Israel over its land.
The European Parliament also needs to
understand that it is not the Planning Authority for the State of
Israel and that illegal building activity anywhere in the world
should be condemned – not encouraged – in the strongest possible
terms.
The writer works for Regavim, an
independent professional research institute and policy planning
think tank, and can be contacted on ari@regavim.org. The mission of
the institute is to ensure the responsible, legal and
environmentally friendly use of Israel's national lands and the
return of the rule of law to all areas and aspects of the land and
its preservation.
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