The village of Khirbet a-Deir, which lies next to  the village of Tuqu’,  is built on both sides of Route 356 that  connects Bethlehem  and Hebron. On  9 February 2011, a bulldozer  accompanied by two army jeeps laid dirt piles and  boulders at the two  entrances to the Abu Ghassan neighborhood, which is the  northern  section of the village, and at the entrance to the nearby village of   al-Halqum, thus blocking access by car through these entrances. The  action was  taken without informing the residents in advance  and  without explanation.
Residents of Abu Ghassan carry provisions on foot. Photo: Suha Zeid, B'Tselem, 10 Feb. '11.
 Following firm exchanges between residents and  representatives of the Civil Administration, the army opened the  entrance to al-Halqum the same day.    The entrances to the Abu Ghassan  neighborhood remain closed. As a result,  150 people have been left with  no ability to access their neighborhood by car. 
 Taysir Abu Mifrah, who works for the Tuqu’  Municipality,  went to the Etzion Coordination and Liaison Office the  day after the piles were  laid, to find out why the entrances had been  blocked. He was told that the  action had been taken for security  reasons, and also because the access roads  are close to a dangerous  curve in the main road.
A supply truck blocked from entering the village. 10 Feb. '11.
 For more than a month now, residents of Abu  Ghassan have had  to leave their cars on the main road and climb over  the dirt piles and boulders  to reach home. They have to carry all  shopping products, including gas  canisters and animal feed, on their  backs. As the village has no medical  services whatsoever, residents  have carry persons needing medical care over the  piles and boulders to  reach the main road. Children meeting the school bus are  in danger, as  they now have to walk out to the main road.
 The blocking of car access to an entire  neighborhood infringes  the villagers’ rights to freedom of movement, to  earning a livelihood, and to receiving  medical treatment. On 14 April  2011, the Association for Civil Rights in Israel wrote to the military  commander of Judea  and Samaria,  demanding that the blocks be removed  immediately.
No comments:
Post a Comment