Photostory: Volvo equipment used in house demolitions
(part 2)
Adri Nieuwhof,
The Electronic Intifada, 29 December 2010
(
part 1)
Israeli forces are using Volvo construction equipment and trucks in the destruction of Palestinian property. The Electronic Intifada has previously documented the use of Volvo equipment by the Israeli government in its destruction of Palestinian property ("
Photostory: Volvo equipment used in house demolitions," "
Volvo: Symbol of safety or human rights abuses?").
Al-Walaja
Volvo construction equipment and trucks were seen in action on the construction site of Israel's wall near al-Walaja village in the occupied West Bank. The wall will surround al-Walaja from all sides, completely isolating the villagers from their land, near East Jerusalem and on land of the original part of the village which was occupied and destroyed by Zionist forces in 1948, and which is now annexed to parts of Gilo settlement. The villagers of al-Walaja have resisted the wall's construction and have tried to change its path by bringing the case to an Israeli court. On 8 November, Israel's high court suspended the construction of the wall near al-Walaja for 45 days, but the court also ruled that bulldozers can continue to excavate along the wall's path.
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Volvo bulldozers being used to build Israel's wall in al-Walaja village, occupied West Bank, June 2010. (Anne Paq/ActiveStills) |
Jordan Valley
The International Court of Justice (ICJ) reaffirmed the illegality of the construction of the wall and Jewish settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories, including East Jerusalem, in its 2004 ruling. According to the ICJ, construction activities should stop immediately and the wall and settlements should be dismantled. In recent weeks, the Palestinian Bedouin community of Abu Alajaj in Jiftlik, occupied Jordan Valley, was raided by approximately 200 Israeli soldiers. There are plans to expand on the illegal Israeli settlement of Massua and confiscate further land from the Palestinian shepherds of Abu Alajaj. In the early hours of 24 November, one house and three animal shelters were demolished by Israeli forces using a Volvo bulldozer. Settlers cheered the action by the Israeli army. Following the Israeli demolition, villagers found several baby goats lying dead on the ground and many more injured. Three Palestinian men were arrested during the raid.
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Residents from the Khirbet Yarza village in the Jordan Valley stand beside their home after it was demolished by Israeli forces, November 2010. (Anne Paq/ActiveStills) |
Al-Araqib
The Palestinian Bedouins living in al-Araqib in the Naqab (Negev) desert in the south of Israel also witnessed the destructive force of Volvo equipment when their village was destroyed for the third time by Israeli forces on 10 August. The demolition of 45 houses left approximately 300 persons homeless, including 200 children. In an earlier raid the Israeli police had uprooted 850 of the village's olive trees. The land of al-Araqib is being confiscated for a "peace forest" funded by the Jewish National Fund, an international Zionist organization that assists the State of Israel with appropriating Palestinian land. About half of the 90,000 Bedouin holding Israeli citizenship live in unrecognized villages without access to basic amenities. Israeli professor Neve Gordon characterized the razing of Bedouin villages by the Israeli police as "ethnic cleansing" ("
Ethnic cleansing in the Israeli Negev,"
Guardian, 28 July 2010).
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