JORDAN VALLEY, Wednesday, December 04, 2019 (WAFA) – Israeli military today deployed dozens of military vehicles to conduct planned drills in the northern Jordan Valley.
Aref Daraghmeh, former head of council of a Jordan Valley village, said that the Israeli military deployed military vehicles of different sizes in the northern Jordan Valley area of al-Burj as a prelude to conduct drills.
Meanwhile, Mutaz Beharat, a watchdog of settlement construction, said that Israeli settlers ploughed 200 dunams of Palestinian lands in Khirbet Ein al-Hilweh in the northern Jordan Valley.
The settlers came from Maskiyyot, one of the Jewish-only colonial settlements where at least 11,000 settlers live in violation of international law.
This came as settlers riding horses chased Palestinian shepherds grazing their livestock in al-Farisiya village, east of Tubas city.
Under international law, driving residents of an occupied territory from their homes is considered forcible transfer of protected persons, which constitutes a war crime. But residents of Palestinian communities in the Jordan Valley are no strangers to such disruptive Israeli policies.
The valley, which is a fertile strip of land running west along the Jordan River, is home to about 65,000 Palestinians and makes up approximately 30% of the West Bank.
Since 1967, when the Israeli army occupied the West Bank, Israel has transferred at least 11,000 of its Jewish citizens to the Jordan Valley. Some of the settlements in which they live were built almost entirely on private Palestinian land.
The Israel military has also designated about 46 percent of the Jordan Valley as a closed military zone since the beginning of the occupation in June 1967, and has been utilizing the pretext of military drills to forcefully displace Palestinian families living there as part of a policy of ethnic cleansing and stifling Palestinian development in the area.
Approximately 6,200 Palestinians live in 38 communities in places earmarked for military use and have had to obtain permission from the Israeli authorities to enter and live in their communities.
In violation of international law, the Israeli military not only temporarily displaces the communities on a regular basis, but also confiscates their farmlands, demolishes their homes and infrastructure from time to time.
Besides undergoing temporary displacement, the Palestinian families living there face a myriad restrictions on access to resources and services. Meanwhile, Israel exploits the resources of the area and generates profit by allocating generous tracts of land and water resources for the benefit of settlers.
Israeli politicians have made it clear on several occasions that the highly strategic Jordan Valley would remain under their control in any eventuality.
K.F.