AL ARAQIB, ISRAEL // Israeli security forces destroyed a Bedouin
village this week for the second time in a matter of days, leaving 300
inhabitants homeless again after they and dozens of Jewish and Arab volunteers
had begun rebuilding the 45 homes.
Human rights groups warned that these appeared to be the opening
shots in a long-threatened campaign by the Israeli government to begin mass
forced removals of tens of thousands of Bedouin from their ancestral lands in
the southern Negev.
The High Follow-Up Committee, the main political body for
Israel’s Arab minority, vowed this week to help rebuild the village for a second
time and said it would call on the UN to investigate Israel’s treatment of the
Bedouin.
Al Araqib village, which is a few kilometres north of the Negev’s
main city Beersheva, has become a symbol of the struggle by about 90,000 Bedouin
to win recognition for dozens of communities the government claims are built on
state land.
In a test case before the Israeli courts, an inhabitant of al
Araqib has been presenting documents and expert testimony to show his ancestors
owned and lived on the village’s lands many decades before Israel’s
establishment in 1948. The judge is expected to rule within months.
“Tearing down an entire village and leaving its inhabitants
homeless without exhausting all other options for settling longstanding land
claims is outrageous,” said Joe Stork, the deputy Middle East director of Human
Rights Watch.
A force of 1,500 police, including a special riot squad wearing
black balaclavas, entered the village early on Wednesday to pull down a dozen
wooden shacks and a half-built concrete home. The local Aturi tribe had been in
the process of rebuilding the village after it was razed by bulldozers a week
earlier.
The Israeli forces also uprooted 850 olive trees, said Ortal
Tzabar, a spokeswoman for the government’s Land Administration.
Yesterday Adalah, a legal group for Israel’s 1.3 million Arab
citizens, demanded a criminal investigation into what it called “police
brutality” during both demolition operations.
Sawsan Zaher, a lawyer, said assaults on
villagers, confiscation of their property and the security forces’ decision to
cover their faces and not wear identity tags were all designed to “instil fear”
in the residents.
Taleb a-Sanaa, a Bedouin member of the
Israeli parliament who was left unconscious on Wednesday after police dragged
him from a tent in which he was staging a protest, warned that the government
was risking “an uprising in the Negev”.
Six village leaders were arrested shortly afterwards when they
refused to sign a paper committing not to return to al Araqib.
Awad Abu Freih, a village spokesman, said
they remained defiant. “The authorities want to break our connection to this
land so it can be turned over to Jews. They can keep destroying, but we will
continue rebuilding. We will not leave.”
The first demolition of the village, late last month, came
shortly after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned his cabinet that the
growth of the country’s Arab minority, already a fifth of the population, posed
a “palpable threat” to the state’s Jewishness.
“The effect could be that different elements will demand national
rights within Israel – for example, in the Negev – if we allow for a region
without a Jewish majority.”
Last month the government announced a $50 million assistance
programme to encourage army personnel to relocate to Jewish communities in the
Negev.
The Bedouin’s increasing assertiveness about their indigenous
status, which is backed by international groups, has led to a backlash from
officials, who regularly refer to the Bedouin as “squatters” and “invaders” of
state land.
Nili Baruch of Bimkom, an Israeli planning
rights group, said a master plan currently being approved for the metropolitan
area of Beersheva required “more house demolitions and more forced removals of
the Bedouin population”, such as occurred at al-Araqib.
In addition, she said, the authorities had approved a special
operation known as “Hot Wind” to carry out the demolitions.
The government’s conflict with the Bedouin dates back to Israel’s
founding, when most of the Negev’s population were driven out of the new state.
With the highest birth rate in Israel, the surviving tribes have
grown rapidly and now number 180,000, more than a quarter of the Negev’s
population despite waves of state-sponsored Jewish migration.
Israel has refused to recognise most of the Bedouin’s traditional
communities and insists they move into seven deprived townships built by the
government several decades ago. Only about half have done so, with the rest
insisting on their right to continue with their pastoral way of life.
Al-Araqib has become a particular point of friction because most
of the Aturi moved into a nearby township, Rahat, in the 1970s, after their
lands had been declared a closed military zone.
But faced with severe overcrowding in Rahat and no new land for
expansion, many young families began moving back to al-Araqib a decade ago.
Like 45 other unrecognised villages, al Araqib is denied all
services, including water and electricity, and its buildings are illegal.
A recent government commission found that tens of thousands of
Bedouin buildings are subject to demolition orders, though until now individual
buildings have been targeted, not whole communities.
Last month the Beersheva planning committee approved a scheme to
recognise 13 Bedouin villages and force the other inhabitants into the
townships.
In that plan, al Araqib’s lands are designated for a “peace
forest” – funded by an international Zionist organisation, the Jewish National
Fund – a move Mr Abu Freih said was designed to prevent the villagers’ return.
Ms Baruch said the authorities were demanding the inhabitants
move to Rahat, even though no homes were provided for them.
Mr Abu Freih said other parts of the tribe’s lands nearby had
been secretly settled by Jews in 2004. In a night-time operation JNF and
government officials set up caravans that subsequently became an exclusively
Jewish known as Givat Bar.
From 2002, Israel began a policy of annually spraying herbicide
on al-Araqib’s crops, in an attempt to move them off the land, until the supreme
court deemed the practice illegal in 2007.
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