The few family items that survived the attack of the Caterpillars
How can these impoverished people pay such things. Are they to be threatened with debtors' prison? Why enforce such a law? General harassment I suppose.
By Samira
October 31, 2011
The people in the Bedouin community, Mihtawish, in Khan el Ahmar
area outside Jerusalem today faced a house demolition.
Three family houses were demolished, which hosted in total 39
people. 30 of them are children. One family lived in their house year round and
two were soon to come for the winter.
The families will now stay temporarily in tents provided by
the UN, but they will have to move to another area, while the demolition order
is still valid.
Once a humble home for 39 people, 30 of whom were children. I suppose these Bedouin should not complain. At least they have a water kettle ~ in the desert.
The families received the first demolition order 10 days ago and
were then told to demolish their own houses.
When this did not happened a final demolition order was sent
three days ago. Around 10 AM today 15 military vehicles arrived and the army
demolished the three houses.
Two of the sons of the families spotted the jeeps and called the
head of the community, Abu Rayyed, who contacted the UN and the president of
the whole area.
Of course the families did not demolish their homes themselves.
Not only did they lose their homes, but they will also be held responsible to
pay for the rent of the bulldozer that demolished the houses.
Only one woman and one child were present when the demolition
happened. All the men stayed away from the location in order not to be held
financially responsible.
The area is considered Area C, which means no Palestinians are
allowed to build anything, yet Bedouins, known for their nomadic lifestyles,
have been caged between areas. They are also prohibited from rebuilding old
encampments or houses.
Abu Rayyed recently brought new wooden panels and corrugated
iron for his house, but all building materials were confiscated by the Israeli
army. The area is also a nature protectorate, but the hills are all sand and
stones and the only green to be seen is inside the illegal Israeli settlements
that are surrounding the Bedouin communities.
The families in the Bedouin community in Khan el Ahmar are
originally from southern Palestine, but were displaced in the 50′s.
“I was born in ’58, but I am born here too.” says Aby Rayyed.
Now the families are soon to face a second replacement.
This was the first demolition in the whole area of Khan el
Ahmar, but not the last one. The villagers have received a verbal demolition
order for the whole area, and the whole Bedouin community will be displaced.
There are speculations that this will happen in January, but yet
none knows for sure when and how it will happen, or where they will go, as
expressed by a woman who lost her home today.
“They want us to go away, but where should we go? There is
nowhere for us to move. But they want us all to disappear. All of us,” she
said.
Samira
is an activist with International Solidarity Movement (name has been changed).
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