Last Updated: Friday, 26 May 2023, 13:32 GMT

The Catch-22 for Palestinian villages in the West Bank

Publisher IRIN
Author Annie Slemrod
Publication Date 3 June 2015
Cite as IRIN, The Catch-22 for Palestinian villages in the West Bank, 3 June 2015, available at: https://www.refworld.org/docid/55757d2e4.html [accessed 29 May 2023]
DisclaimerThis is not a UNHCR publication. UNHCR is not responsible for, nor does it necessarily endorse, its content. Any views expressed are solely those of the author or publisher and do not necessarily reflect those of UNHCR, the United Nations or its Member States.

A small collection of shelters in the sweltering heat of the south Hebron hills, the village of Khirbet Susiya has barely enough electricity to power a fan, yet it has become a major Israeli-Palestinian flashpoint.

In recent weeks it has hosted a steady stream of visitors - even establishing a small "solidarity" centre offering tea and flyers titled "Save Susiya" in Arabic and Hebrew. Activists from various groups - including left-wing Israelis - stop by to offer support.

For Susiya is set to become the latest Palestinian village to be destroyed by Israel after a court ruling. Residents like Nasser Nawaja, the village's unofficial spokesperson, are wondering if and when the bulldozers will arrive.

"I think the state wants to demolish us," he says.

The second Susiya

The position of the 350 residents here is emblematic of the Catch-22 situation facing many Palestinians in this part of the West Bank. To avoid their homes being destroyed, the villagers need a state-approved plan or building permit. But, for Palestinians at least, such permits are nigh on impossible to get.

According to the Israeli group Bimkom - Planners for Human Rights, between 2002 and 2012, out of 3,565 Palestinian applications for building permits just 210 were approved. With the success rate so low, many feel discouraged and applications are on the downturn. There are no available statistics about illegal Palestinian building.

For a rough contrast, Peace Now reports that in the same period more than 17,000 residential units were build in Jewish settlements, with or without permits.

Susiya has applied both for multiple permits to build and for recognition from Israel's Civil Administration. Both were denied, leaving it among the roughly 90 percent of Palestinian villages in this area without formal government permission to exist.

"It isn't easy to live in a tent, without protection from the heat or cold," explains Nawaja. "We want to build and lead normal lives."

And so they built without permits. Nothing too extravagant - small kitchens to their semi-detached tents, cement floors - steps to make life in the extreme weather conditions more bearable. But it is this building that is the justification for destroying the village.

A few hundred yards away, there is a second Susiya. This one is occupied by Jewish settlers and has been granted all the necessary permits.

The contrast between the two is stark. The Jewish Susiya is neat rows of homes with red pointed roofs, the Palestinian one communal outhouses and worn tarpaulin.

Two decades in the making

The dual system dates back to Israel's occupation of the West Bank in the Arab-Israel war of 1967, but was altered by the 1995 Oslo II Accords, which were supposed to lead to lasting peace between Palestinians and Israelis.

The agreement separated the West Bank into three parts - A, B, and C. Area A, including Ramallah, Bethlehem and other major Palestinian cities, is under control of the Palestinian Authority and Israeli civilians are technically forbidden from entry. Area B is under Palestinian governance but Israeli security control. And Area C, where Susiya falls, is under complete Israeli control, and administered by a branch of the Israeli Army called the Civil Administration in Judea and Samaria, part of the Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT).

The divisions were supposed to be interim, with part of Area C - now 60 percent of the West Bank - eventually to be given to the Palestinians. But the peace plan fell apart, and the situation of the two Susiyas highlights in bold the separate laws for Jews and Palestinians living in Area C.

Home to between 150,000 and 300,000 Palestinians, this segment of the West Bank is of particular interest to Israel's right wingers, as it is the location of all of Israel's 355,000 person strong settlements, deemed illegal by the United Nations.

To live in accordance with Israeli law in Area C, both Israeli and Palestinian dwellings must have approved plans. The territory operates under a 1966 Jordanian planning law, but starting in 1971, the Israeli military issued a series of orders that eliminated local involvement for Palestinians in planning and set up "Special Planning Committees" for settlers, effectively establishing two systems - one for Palestinians, and one for Israelis.

For Palestinians, this has meant it is incredibly difficult to receive permission to build, and so they do so off the electricity or water grids, without permission and often in a haphazard way. Amnesty International recently said the dual planning system has "led to decades of human rights violations."

Naftali Bennett, leader of the right-wing Jewish Home party, has proposed that Israel annex Area C, where he approximates only 50,000 Palestinians make their homes. This would entail Israel claiming the entire territory and forcing the Palestinians to accept Israeli nationality and rule or leave.

On the edge

For Susiya, the result may be destruction, and not for the first time. The villagers were expelled in the 1980s - from the caves where they lived then - to make way for archaeological exploration of an ancient Jewish historical site. In the cave where Nawaja was born, visitors watch a video on the area's Jewish past.

Even the demolition of structures deemed illegal is two-tiered - with twice as many Palestinian homes destroyed as Jewish ones

Since then, they have been moved and seen their houses razed to the ground multiple times - some 70 demolition orders have been issued in total.

With the help of several nonprofits, including an Israeli group called Rabbis for Human Rights, the village submitted a master plan to the civil administration authority, hoping to build on the lands they own. They were rejected, and the case is under appeal in the Supreme Court. Usually, pending such an appeal, an interim injunction order is issued to stop the demolition. But in late April, the judge - a settler - issued no such order.

Even the demolition of structures deemed illegal is two-tier. According to government figures acquired by freedom of information requests by settlement researcher and activist Dror Etkes, historically the state has issued 14,782 demolition orders for Palestinian structures and 7,091 for Jewish ones.

The authorities also raze Palestinian structures declared illegal at more than twice the rate of similarly adjudged Jewish structures, such as settlement outposts -14.2 percent of Palestinian structures with demolition orders are taken down, opposed to just 6.5 percent of Jewish structures.

COGAT declined to give a full interview, but did provide IRIN with a statement. It said: "The present case refers to a group of illegal houses, next to Susiya's archeological site, which expanded throughout the years… despite the stop-work orders which were delivered to the buildings at the site. This presents a clear violation of the interim orders which were given during the hearings held on this issue in the Supreme Court."

"The story of Susiya is the story of Area C," Nawaja says. A story, which he believes, has largely been overlooked. "The world talks about human rights, but never about our right to just live here."

Several nongovernmental organisations have turned to the Supreme Court to challenge the Area C planning system itself. The cases are ongoing, but there isn't a great deal of hope.

In Susiya, villagers sleep in the solidarity centre at night in case the army comes. They have planted modest flower and herb gardens, a sign that they are in it for the long haul.

Nawaja is frustrated but undeterred. In the legal battle, the state has proposed villagers move to an area that straddles Area A. But the Susiya villagers have no interest in leaving their land, and will continue to fight.

"I don't know," Nawaja says, shaking his head. "Here there are two laws, one for settlers and one for Palestinians, but we all live in the same place."

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