Sunday, September 7, 2014

Israel refuses to allow Palestinians to build on own land near Yatta



HEBRON (Ma’an) — Israeli authorities have refused to allow locals near the village of Yatta to build on lands they own, citing a previous order for “military purposes” despite the fact that the area is still open, a local activist told Ma’an.


Coordinator of the popular and national local committees in the region Rateb al-Jubur told Ma’an that locals had asked to build on privately owned land near the village but on Saturday authorities confirmed the previous confiscation and refused to allow them to do so.


Al-Jubur said that Israeli authorities issued the original confiscation orders in 1997 and accused authorities of attempting to “displace residents.”


According to al-Jubur, the lands — which cover around 500 acres (2,000 dunums) — are located in the Wadi Ibn Zaid area, close to the village of al-Deirat east of Yatta and to the west of the Israeli settlement of Karmel.


He said the lands are privately owned by the al-Hamamdeh, Abu Aram, al-Naamin, al-Jabbarin, and Muhammad families.


He said the owners of the lands have started to take legal actions to cancel the confiscation order.


According to al-Jubur, locals were planning to plant the lands with olive trees and winter crops ahead of the coming season.


An Israeli military spokesperson could not be reached for comment.


The South Hebron Hills, known locally as Masafer Yatta, lie almost entirely in Area C, the 62 percent of the West Bank under full Israeli civil and security control since the 1993 Oslo Accords.


Around 3,000 Israeli settlers live in illegal Jewish-only settlements in the Yatta region, according to the Applied Research Institute Jerusalem.


The safety of these settlers is often given as an excuse for forced displacement of Palestinians who are native to the area



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