Palestinian Farmers bulldoze Apartheid Wall to reclaim Orange Groves

[Qalqilya] Assisted by activists from the International Solidarity Movement,
Palestinian farmers from the villages of Zeta and Atil today
bulldozed 8 roadblocks erected around the foundations of the new
Apartheid Wall which separates them from their farmland. The
removal of the roadblocks enabled more than 50 farmers to harvest
their crops for the first time in weeks.

Construction of the new wall known as the Security Fence, but dubbed
the "Apartheid Wall" by Israeli and Palestinian human rights groups,
began earlier this year in the northern West Bank. Instead of
following the "green line", the official border between the
Palestinian territories and Israel, the wall will run inside
Palestinian territory effectively annexing a further 10% of the West
Bank. The 8m high concrete wall, which will be some 350km in length
when complete, will leave whole cities such as Qalqylia cut off from
the rest of the West Bank and leave villages such as Zeta without
the farmland upon which their existence depends. Approximately 900
of Zeta's 2000 dunnums (1 dunnum=1000m2) of land will be destroyed or
isolated by the wall.

This is a double blow to the villagers of Zeta. In 1948, the newly
formed Israeli state took their land by force. Farmers were then
forced to purchase new land from a neighbouring village. Now that
land is effectively being annexed by the Israeli government,
leaving villagers once more destitute. The land around Zeta is some
of the most fertile in the West Bank. Around 60% of the fruit and
vegetables consumed in the West Bank are produced in the greenhouses
and fruit groves of the Tulkarem/Qalqilya area.

An ISM spokesperson said "Israel's Apartheid Wall is yet another
device to camouflage the theft of yet more Palestinian land and
leave Palestinians to "live like dogs" in Israeli general Moshe
Dayan's famous phrase. Today's action shows what can be done by
Palestinians with limited international support. But without major
and sustained international pressure, Palestinians such as the
villagers of Zeta will once more become the victims of Israel's
criminal state."

Tomorrow activists will attempt to keep open the roads unblocked in
today's action enabling more farmers to reach their lands.

The international activists involved in today's action were from the UK,
Sweden and the US.

For more information, please contact:
Chris Dunham +972 67657262

END