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Jonathan
Cook
(Jonathan
Cook is a journalist living in Israel.)
May
10, 2003
The
White House's hoped-for restructuring of the Middle East has begun:
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein has been ousted from power by US
and British troops who now patrol the streets of Baghdad, while
a few hundred miles away Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat has been
shunted aside in favor of the more Washington-friendly Mahmoud Abbas.
With these tectonic shifts dominating Middle East coverage, Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has been preparing a smaller-scale reordering
of the region which he hopes will escape attention. He has devised
a plan to rid the huge semi-desert area of the Negev, located in
the south of Israel, of its Bedouin farmers.
The
Bedouin, who comprise some 15 percent of the one million Arab citizens
of Israel, are divided into two main groups. A few tens of thousands
living in the Galilee in the north are descended from tribes that
arrived from Syria. A southern group, the majority, reached the
Negev from Sinai and the Arabian Peninsula. Before 1948, when the
state of Israel was created, the Negev was almost exclusively inhabited
by Bedouin tribes, whose historic claims to the land had been recognized
by the Ottoman Empire and the British Mandate authorities.
Israeli
governments have tried consistently to foster divisions within the
country's Arab population to prevent it from mobilizing against
discriminatory state policies. The Negev Bedouin in particular have
found themselves separated both geographically and socially from
other Arab citizens. One successful way of isolating the Bedouin
from the main Christian and Muslim communities has been to pressure
them to serve in the army, mainly as low-ranking desert trackers
(only the small Druze community is conscripted).
BEDOUIN
"TRANSFER"
During
the 1948 war, and afterward, it was considered a priority by the
fledgling Israeli state to clear the Negev of its Bedouin population.
Israel's first prime minister, David Ben Gurion, wrote to his son
11 years before the birth of the Jewish state: "Negev land
is reserved for Jewish citizens whenever and wherever they want.
We must expel the Arabs and take their place." By 1951, fewer
than 13,000 inhabitants remained of a community that numbered somewhere
between 70,000 and 90,000 in the late 1940s. As late as 1953, the
United Nations reported the expulsion of some 7,000 Negev Bedouin
into adjacent areas of Jordan, Egyptian-occupied Gaza and the Sinai,
though many later slipped back over the borders undetected.
Moshe
Dayan, commander of Israeli forces in the 1967 war and the country's
most renowned military hero, gave voice to a common wish when he
predicted in 1963 that "this phenomenon of the Bedouin will
disappear." The reasons for the antagonism shared by Israeli
leaders were manifold: Israeli governments, aiming for control of
the land and its demographics, were concerned by the Bedouins' fertility
rate -- one of the highest in the world. Their semi-nomadic lifestyle
made it all but impossible to contain their movement across territory
and to monitor their political activities as the state kept watch
over the sedentary Arab communities. Farming, the economic lifeblood
of the Bedouin, was regarded as labor suitable only for Jews. According
to the pioneer ethic within Zionism, working the land was synonymous
with redeeming it. The Negev, some two thirds of the new state's
land mass, was viewed as a huge tract that could absorb future Jewish
immigration. Finally, the desert's barren expanses, difficult to
infiltrate or traverse unseen, were considered the ideal setting
for military bases and sensitive operations. Israel's nuclear reactor,
for instance, is located near the Negev town of Dimona, as is its
implicitly acknowledged nuclear arsenal.
In
the decades following the 1948 war, Israeli governments worked relentlessly
to make the Bedouin "disappear." The Bedouin who had not
fled or been terrorized from their tribal lands during the war were
"transferred" in the 1950s, either to the center of the
country, to ghettoes attached to towns like Ramle and Lod, where
many work as low-wage manual laborers, or to a small area close
to the town of Beersheva, in the northern Negev. The rest of the
Negev, some 85 percent of the total land mass, was declared off
limits, designated as blocs of military zones and conservation parks.
The
Negev area in which the Bedouin were concentrated came to be known
as the "siege zone": a ring of Jewish settlements was
established to contain the Bedouin, while their lands were further
whittled away through the construction of industrial areas, more
military zones and conservation parks, and an airport. Each village
was encircled and separated from its neighbors by new Jewish farms,
settlements or development towns. Today the Bedouin, a quarter of
the Negev's population, occupy just 2 percent of its land.
"UNRECOGNIZED"
VILLAGES
Since
the mid-1960s, Israel has classified these Bedouin communities in
the Negev as "scattered" and put great pressure on the
inhabitants to give up their traditional lifestyles as farmers.
The state has offered only to move these Bedouin into one of seven
deprived urban reservations created in the 1970s. Half of the 130,000
Bedouin in the Negev now live in these townships, all of which languish
at the bottom of every socio-economic index.
Those
who refuse the state's offer of relocation live in "unrecognized"
villages, meaning that provision of public services, such as water,
electricity and sanitation, as well as medical clinics and schools,
is illegal. In the Bedouin village of Abda, for example, the children
must make a round trip of 87 miles each day to a "recognized"
area with a school. All buildings are unlicensed (there are no municipalities
to apply to for a permit) and are therefore subject to demolition
orders. Some 30,000 Bedouin structures in the Negev are under constant
threat of destruction. As a result, most villagers are forced to
live in tents or metal shacks. (The problem of the unrecognized
villages also afflicts the northern Bedouin population, although
on a smaller scale.)
Sharon,
who owns a large ranch in the Negev, has been one of the prime movers
in the long-running, low-intensity war to transfer the Bedouin off
their historic lands. In the late 1970s, when he served as agriculture
minister, he established a paramilitary police force for the Negev,
misleadingly entitled the Green Patrol, to enforce the demolition
of Bedouin homes and to confiscate farmers' herds of cattle, sheep
and goats. At the time, Sharon promised that the activities of the
Green Patrol would generate a "revitalization" of the
Negev. Now, as prime minister, he has the chance to finish the job
he started.
SHARON'S
PRIZED REAL ESTATE
In
April 2003, Sharon's government approved a five-year plan, backed
by a budget of more than $200 million, as "a real attempt to
deal with problems faced by [the Bedouin] sector, as well as the
land issue." The government is due to begin implementing the
program later in 2003. Although the plan was reportedly the work
of a special ministerial committee, advised by the local councils
of Jewish towns in the Negev, most of its inspiration came from
Sharon himself.
The
Hebrew media enthusiastically characterized the program as a way
to provide mechanisms to settle land disputes and develop infrastructure
for the Negev's Bedouin, including proposals to establish new Bedouin
communities. A local council leader, Shmuel Rifman, who represents
4,500 Jews in the Negev, mostly ranchers, told the daily Ha'aretz
newspaper on January 7: "Anyone who talks about a powder keg
in the Negev when relating to the region's Bedouin must unhesitatingly
adopt this plan."
Bedouin
leaders reacted differently, however. The Bedouins' main lobbying
group, the Regional Council for the Unrecognized Villages, stated
in a press release: "We see this plan as a declaration of war
on the Bedouin community of the unrecognized villages." It
added: "This plan was never discussed with any of the population
or their representatives." That may be because not one Bedouin
or Arab representative has been appointed to the 17-member Southern
Regional Planning Committee, which oversees planning issues in the
Negev. The same Ha'aretz report hinted at the cause of the Bedouins'
alarm. The five-year plan's secondary goal, it was revealed, was
the "massive reinforcement of officials responsible for enforcing
planning and construction ordinances in the Negev," including
an expanded Green Patrol and more staff for the Justice Ministry
and the courts dealing with land claims.
In
fact, while the five-year plan masquerades as an attempt at disinterested
adjudication of land disputes between the Bedouin and the government,
it is really a coordinated policy of using force to transfer all
the Bedouin from their "scattered" villages into three
new reservations, based on three former unrecognized villages and
designed along the lines of the existing seven townships.
Negev
land will then be freed for one of Sharon's long-cherished dreams,
to settle new Jewish immigrants in the arid region, either by offering
large subsidies to encourage them to move from the densely populated
center of the country or as part of a World Zionist Organization
(WZO) scheme to bring 350,000 immigrants to the Galilee and Negev
by the end of the decade. Land will also be made available to individual
wealthy farmers for more "ranches" similar to Sharon's,
where crops such as grapes and dates can be grown intensively or
sheep and cattle reared. Subsidized water and electrification for
the farms have already been approved.
Work
on 14 new Jewish settlements in the Negev is due to begin in early
summer 2003, as originally conceived by Sharon when he was housing
minister in the early 1990s. The new construction will mark the
first time in 25 years that the WZO has financed settlement-building
in Israel rather than the West Bank and Gaza. The first Jewish community,
Givat Bar, is to be built on the land of Araqeeb village, south
of the Bedouin township of Rahat, which was "temporarily"
confiscated from the local Bedouin tribe in 1953.
"TRESPASSING"
AT HOME
The
reordering of the Negev will be achieved in two stages. First, most
of the 70,000 Negev Bedouin who live in 45 unrecognized villages
will gain a new legal designation under an amendment to the 1981
Law on Public Land being hurried through the Knesset. The "Eviction
of Trespassers" amendment will give officials the power to
classify anyone as a trespasser living on state lands without going
through lengthy court procedures. The designation can be applied
retroactively to encompass Bedouin who have "trespassed"
in the past three years.
The
trespass law will criminalize the Bedouin, as well as their villages.
Offenders -- anyone who tries to encamp or farm on his historic
lands -- will face six months in jail and a fine. Repeat offenders
will get two years of imprisonment and a doubled fine. Bedouin villagers
will be obliged to prove that they are not trespassing. It will
not be possible for a defense lawyer to argue that the villages
have existed since before the creation of the state, or in other
cases that the land villagers now dwell where they were moved by
the state when their original lands were confiscated. To avoid being
designated as trespassers, the villagers will therefore have to
register their lands individually. Given the extant court decisions
that unrecognized villages are built on state land, the chances
of winning this argument are virtually nil.
The
Negev program lays aside a budget for compensation of displaced
Bedouin, although if the precedent of the former wave of registrations
in the 1970s is followed, reparations will be meager or will take
the form of offers of subsidized homes in the new townships. A clue
to the government's thinking was provided by the Israeli Arab lobbying
group Mossawa, whose analysis shows that for the year 2003 the government
has actually cut the land compensation budget for the Bedouin to
$26 million from an average annual fund of $30 million. Only $65
million has been allocated for the remaining four years of the plan,
nearly half what normal projections would suggest. That allows for
less than $1,000 in compensation for every Bedouin in an unrecognized
village -- and less than the $80 million allocated for the destruction
of their homes.
It
will be possible to appeal disputes between individual Bedouin and
the Israel Lands Administration (ILA), the government's land-holding
arm, over the status of land. But such appeals will be referred
to a ministerial committee or to the "responsible minister"
-- that is, to the more powerful party in the dispute. Until recently,
the "responsible minister" would have been the interior
minister, but in the new coalition government that job has gone
to the dovish Avraham Poraz of Shinui. Sharon therefore transferred
planning responsibilities temporarily to his own prime minister's
office, before passing them on to his hawkish trade and industry
minister, Likud member Ehud Olmert, who presided over numerous demolitions
of Palestinian houses as mayor of Jerusalem. Olmert was quoted in
Ha'aretz on April 11 saying that "we will conduct contacts
with [the Bedouin]. However, I assume that they will absolutely
oppose [the plan]. We will not be deterred from implementing the
decision, because there is no other way that we can fulfill [our
mandate]. If [this issue] was subject to an agreement, it would
never be given. It is a question of the government's determination
in implementing its decisions."
PERILS
OF RECOGNITION
The
five-year plan's second thrust is the creation of three new townships
based on three Bedouin villages that have been recognized, Bir Hadaj,
Dariyat and al-Madbah, which are respectively to be given the Hebrew
names of Bir Heim, Mari'at and Beit Felet. The villages were chosen
because they are home to three of the largest tribes, whose combined
opposition might have posed the biggest threat to implementing the
plan. Tens of thousands of other Bedouin will be left with no choice
but to move into the three new or seven existing townships.
For
varying tactical reasons, over the course of the 1990s another four
of the 45 unrecognized villages were also recognized, though public
services in those villages have not improved. The exclusively Jewish
Southern Regional Planning Committee has refused to approve local
master plans for the recognized villages, thereby condemning Bedouin
residents to life without water and electricity supply indefinitely.
The sham of recognition is illustrated by the case of Abda, which
won a supposed change of status in 1992. The community, however,
was not recognized in its entirety, only the homes of seven families
who were to be incorporated into a planned national park to include
the historic village of Abda and its Nabatean ruins.
The
government's likely intentions toward the partially recognized villages,
as well as the unrecognized ones, emerged on March 4, 2003 when
the Israel Lands Administration, without warning, sent helicopters
loaded with herbicides to Abda and sprayed some 375 acres of crops
being grown by the villagers. Children playing below were covered
in the toxic mist, the pilots apparently undeterred by their presence
in the fields. Although the government later advised residents that
the herbicides were not harmful to humans, several children needed
treatment for shock after they and their parents thought they had
been the victims of a chemical attack from Iraq. The crop destruction
was repeated on April 2, when some 1,300 acres were sprayed -- more
than 300 acres of which belonged to the family of Sheikh Jabar Abu
Kaff, head of the Regional Council for the Unrecognized Villages.
DEFINING
FIGHT
The
spraying incidents follow on the heels of the demolition of dozens
of Bedouin homes in the spring of 2003. There has been a marked
increase in such destructions over the past year, suggesting that
Sharon is determined to turn the screws ever tighter. A new precedent
was set on February 5 with the razing of a mosque in Tel al-Milleh
village, the first time a place of worship has been destroyed. The
villagers had built the mosque illegally after being refused a permit
and having been offered nowhere else to pray by the authorities.
When the villagers and other Bedouin and Arab citizens joined together
to rebuild the mosque within a few days, the Southern Regional Planning
Committee issued another demolition order to the ILA, although the
order has been frozen for the time being by the courts.
Adalah,
a Israeli NGO which provides legal defense to the country's Arab
citizens, has threatened Sharon with court challenges if he proceeds
with his five-year plan for the Negev, which they describe as both
discriminatory and illegal. Sharon is unlikely to be intimidated,
knowing that the courts have sided consistently with the state in
its land disputes with the Bedouin. His scheme is a reminder to
Israel's Arab minority that its defining fight with the state --
over access to and control of land -- is far from finished. The
crop spraying and new wave of demolitions indicate that Sharon is
likely to show little mercy in his battle to clear the Negev. This
time he appears determined to make sure the Bedouin disappear from
this prized real estate for good.

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