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Students
waiting to take the daily trip to school
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By
Hanadi Dwaikat, IOL Correspondent
WEST
BANK, September 14 (IslamOnline.net) – It used to be such a tranquil
breathtaking village where leaves rustle in the olive breeze.
Now,
the grass is no longer green and trees have been uprooted. Israel has
started laying the foundation of four of its settlements while its
illegal separation wall was enough to cut off Zahr Al-Malih and annex
its fertile ground to what is now Israel.
Just
25 kilometers northwest of the northern West Bank city of Jenin along
the UN-demarcated Green Line, the village has lost its glamour as it
has been swallowed by grotesque cement blocs.
"Once
you step in the village, you are faced with an Israeli
barricade," Mustafa Al-Khatib, a university student, said
angrily.
"Now
you have to be well-connected or supported by human rights
organizations to enter the onetime village," he added
sarcastically.
Khatib
told IslamOnline.net that the odyssey to enter the village started
with humiliating body search that often takes the shape of banditry.
4
Settlements & a Wall
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Encircled
by Israel’s settlements and separation wall
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Haj
Saleh Al-Khatib has had his land confiscated by Israeli authorities.
Now he can hardly single it out from sprawling four Jewish
settlements.
"The
village is absorbed by the settlements: To the East, you have the key
Shakid settlement, Tal Mansha to the West, Hananiet to the North in
addition to the separation wall in the South."
"The
wall and the paralyzing Israeli siege have left us isolated from the
entire world let alone intermittent settlers' attacks on our homes and
properties," Khatib told IOL.
The
village also lacks basic infrastructure. A mosque and a school are
something of a luxury.
Israeli
occupation authorities have denied the Palestinian natives permission
to build a school under the feeble excuse of its relatively small
140,000 population, according to Ghaleb Al-Khatib, the head of the
village's projects committee.
Palestinian
students have to go all the way to a faraway school, sometimes on
foot.
"Going
to school is a drudgery for students, particularly after the
construction of the West Bank wall," Ghaleb said.
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One
of the settlements overlooking the village
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To
add salt to injury, recent statistics have showed that unemployment is
running at a mind-boggling 75 percent.
The
village is also running out of food supplies and has actually one
grocery to meet the demands of its residents.
"Israeli
occupation soldiers have prevented us from using gas lams, fearing
that we might make an explosive charge. Now we cook on fire,"
said grocer Ahmed Al-Khatib.
The
UN General Assembly demanded
Israel on July 20 to abide by the International Court of
Justice's ruling and tear down the separation wall, but Tel Aviv
defiantly pledged to pursue the construction.
Hawkish
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon further gave a
"new push" to its settlement program in defiance of
the internationally-backed roadmap peace plan by approving the
construction of 600 new settlements in the West Bank.