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Writers Articles And Opinions |
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05 June 2010 By Stephen Lendman
Founded in 1972, the Association
for Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI) is the country's
leading human and civil rights organization through
litigation, legal advocacy, education, and public
outreach. In May 2009, it published "The State of
Human Rights in East Jerusalem: Fact and Figures,"
then a follow-up June report titled, "Life in the
Garbage: A Status Report of Sanitation Services in
East Jerusalem." Both reports are reviewed below.
East Jerusalem
by the Numbers
-- based on 2007 data, the
Palestinian population numbered 260.5 thousand;
-- 66.8% of families are
impoverished, including 74% of children; over 94,000
"live in a perpetual state of poverty;"
-- since occupying the city,
Israel expropriated over one-third of its Arab-owned
land;
-- by yearend 2007, over 50,000
exclusively Jewish housing units were built on
expropriated land, none for Palestinians;
-- during the first half of 2009,
the Jerusalem Municipality demolished 21 Palestinian
homes, a process that continues relentlessly;
-- in Arab areas, the city lacks
70 km of sewage lines;
-- about 160,000 Palestinians
lack water system connections;
-- Palestinian areas lack 1,500
classrooms; the shortage shows up in the 50% dropout
rate; and
-- about 9,000 Palestinians are
deprived of school.
Illegally annexed in June 1967,
Jerusalem is Israel's largest city. Today, the
Separation Wall completely severs the Arab East from
the surrounding area, severely impacting its
residents' economy, culture political viability, and
future.
As an occupier, Israel is
responsible for the population's welfare and basic
rights under international humanitarian law - an
obligation it's defiled for 43 years by failing to
budget minimal resources needed to fulfill it.
Instead, it's practiced willful
neglect by discriminating in planning, construction,
land expropriation, and investment in physical
infrastructure, government, and municipal services. As
a result, East Jerusalem residents suffer worsening
conditions of distress under Israel's plan to
dispossess Palestinian residents to make the entire
city exclusively Jewish.
"Life in East Jerusalem can be
described as a continuing cycle of neglect,
discrimination, poverty, and shortages," compounded by
military occupation, the encircling Separation Wall,
and worsening daily hardships. As a result, most
Palestinians don't receive, and can't afford basic
necessities most people take for granted.
Most harmed are the elderly,
disabled, and children, chronic poverty also taking
its toll on stable family relationships, leading to an
increase in violence and crime, an unconducive
environment for child development, plus causing
serious health and nutritional problems. It reflects a
deliberate Israeli effort to dispossess Arabs to
create more space for Jews - ethnic cleansing,
Israeli-style.
Civil Status
Obstructions and Denials
After the 1967 Six Day War, East
Jerusalem residents became permanent Israeli
residents, affording them the right to live and work
in Israel without special permits. Under the National
Insurance Law, they're also entitled to health
insurance and the right to vote in municipal, not
national elections.
In addition, permanent residency,
unlike citizenship, passes on conditionally to
children. For example, marrying someone without
permanent residency or citizenship status requires
applying for family unification to live together. In
fact, however, Israel treats East Jerusalem Arabs as
foreigners whose rights can be summarily revoked,
denied, or severely restricted.
As a result, residents endure
repeated investigations and inquiries to keep proving
their legitimacy - so Israel may deny it, an
arbitrary, common practice. In addition, time and
expense are involved, including for services
applications that can take months or years to be
considered.
Many Palestinians live outside
Jerusalem's municipal boundaries with no Israeli
residency status. Severed from the West Bank by the
Separation Wall, they're trapped in East Jerusalem
with no recognized status. In October 2007, Israel
denied them permanent residency, issuing only
temporary permits under military authority. Even
getting them involves cost and bureaucratic red tape,
and those with them may live in their homes, but not
work or drive in Jerusalem. Nor can they get
education, health, or other services. As a result,
they've been ghettoized under severe, unrelenting
duress as foreigners in their own homes on their own
land.
Obstructing New
Palestinian Construction
For decades in East Jerusalem,
it's been virtually impossible for Palestinians to get
new construction permits, because Israel authorizes
all development for Jews, much of it on increasing
amounts of expropriated land. Palestinians even trying
to get permits face exhausting bureaucratic procedures
and costly fees, beyond what most of them can afford.
Israel's 2006 Outline Plan,
"Jerusalem 2000," perpetuates extreme discrimination,
favoring Jews alone. As a result, Palestinian
construction without permits risks eventual demotions
and fines, much of it indiscriminate to harass. Yet
"unauthorized building is a testament not to an
unwillingness to comply with the law....but (to)
prov(ing) that the current planning system fails to
address....the real needs of" East Jerusalem's
Palestinians.
In 2008, the Jerusalem
Municipality demolished 85 East Jerusalem structures,
a third more than in 2007. Then since January 2009,
1,052 additional demolition orders were issued in the
first six months, part of Israel's relentless drive to
Judaize the entire city, aided by Attorney General
Menahem Mazus' permission to confiscate heavy
machinery used for "illegal construction."
Blatant Neglect
of Services and Vital Infrastructure
Chronic sanitation facility
shortages threaten health and life, partly the result
of garbage left on streets and in illegal dumps
throughout East Jerusalem. More on this below.
In addition, vital infrastructure
is neglected and inadequate. As a result, roads are
studded with potholes. The few existing sidewalks are
in serious disrepair, causing damage to people and
property. Public parks and recreational facilities are
a rarity. Few municipal forms are in Arabic. The
postal service barely functions. A mere seven
facilities serve over 260,000 residents compared to 50
in West Jerusalem.
Sewage and drainage
infrastructure is dilapidated, the result of years of
neglect. Some neighborhoods have no connection to the
system, relying instead on cesspits. In other areas,
facilities are antiquated and poorly maintained.
Lacking over 70 km of sewage
lines, liquid waste at times flows close to homes and
children's play areas, severe weather exacerbating the
problem. Despite repeated complaints, this and other
problems aren't addressed, nor is there any intent to
institute improvements. Even when residents are
willing to subsidize the cost, bureaucratic delays
obstruct commencement of needed work.
The Separation Wall exacerbated
the problem, destroying several kilometers of sewer
lines during construction. Only those affecting the
Shuafat-Ras Hamis refugee camp were repaired after
repeated requests.
Lack of Fresh
Water
About 160,000 East Jerusalem
residents aren't connected to the municipal water
system, well over half the population. As a result,
their choices are to rig makeshift connections to
water mains, to legally connected homes, rely on
stored containers, or buy privately-supplied water at
unaffordable prices.
The situation creates risks.
Water pressure is weak and unreliable. Stored amounts
can be contaminated, and lacking a clean, fresh supply
makes residents vulnerable to infectious diseases and
prevents them from maintaining proper hygiene levels.
A Critical
Classroom Shortage
East Jerusalem's education system
hasn't kept pace with its population growth, four
times its 1967 size. As a result, around 1,500 new
classrooms are needed, and 400 more by yearend 2010.
Because of a lack of facilities, only half of all
school-age children are enrolled in municipal schools,
mostly in overcrowded, unsafe facilities, some of them
makeshift.
The alternative is to rely on
private Jerusalem or West Bank schools, what most
families can't afford or reach. Pre-schools are also
affected. As a result, 90% of 15,000 three and four
year olds have no facility whatever. East Jerusalem
has only two municipal pre-schools, with a combined
55-children enrollment. Another 1,900 attend a few
dozen private facilities, charging high tuitions,
unaffordable for most parents.
Deficient
Welfare Services
Despite East Jerusalem's high
poverty level, affecting over two-thirds of its
residents, only 22% receive social services, because
of under-funding and discriminatory neglect,
threatening the system with collapse.
Police
Brutality and Human Rights Violations
Human rights organizations, like
ACRI, get regular complaints about police and Border
Patrol brutality and harassment. Investigations are
seldom conducted, nearly always ending in whitewash,
absolving the offenders.
ACRI represented one resident
attacked by police, despite displaying no hostility or
violence. They dragged, tear-gassed, and handcuffed
him, broke his arm, then kicked and beat him. During
Cast Lead, over 200 protesters were beaten and
arrested, many of them children, and some detainees
were assaulted in their homes in the middle of the
night, then forcibly taken away.
In addition, various Palestinian
civil society and human rights organizations were
targeted and shut down, allegedly for unsubstantiated
security reasons, in fact, to prevent them from
operating.
Free Movement
Restrictions and Checkpoint Harassment
Over 100,000 East Jerusalem
residents on the Separation Wall's east side have been
disconnected from the city. In February 2009, A-Ram
checkpoint was closed, leaving Atarot (Kalandia) only,
linking northern neighborhoods to the city's center.
Atarot also provides residents on the Wall's other
side with municipal and urban postal, national
insurance, and employment services.
Yet congestion makes crossing
"unbearable," and despite promises to alleviate it,
residents face long waits, from one - two hours, to
get through in either direction. Worse still, the
public transportation lane was cancelled, forcing
passengers off buses to proceed on foot. As a result,
students heading for school are affected. So are car
owners allowed passage only through private lanes, but
not their passengers (including the sick, elderly and
pregnant), forced to get out and walk.
Checkpoint harassment exacerbates
the problem, including verbal and physical abuse by
soldiers and private security employees. "In East
Jerusalem, far from the eye of the public and the
media, the authorities (behave) toward residents in a
manner that would be inconceivable anywhere in Israel"
toward Jews.
Appalling East
Jerusalem Sanitation Conditions
East Jerusalem neighborhoods are
bleak, the result of "garbage strewn all over the
streets and trash bins (filled) to overflowing, broken
down, and leaking." Sanitation, in fact, is so poor,
it got special mention in the State Comptroller Report
stating:
"Cleanliness in East Jerusalem is
much worse than in other parts of the city. Municipal
attention to (basic) cleanliness and care of East
Jerusalem is deficient and reflective of ongoing
neglect....There is a need to clarify the jurisdiction
of the State of Israel and the City of Jerusalem with
regard to meeting the needs of this population, and
enhancing coordination between the government
ministries and the municipality."
Progress toward solving this
problem is nil, ACRI saying:
Appalling sanitation services
reflect "a continuing violation of the rights of East
Jerusalem residents to health, life, and a clean
environment free of sanitation risks."
ACRI's study showed:
-- entire streets without trash
collection or cleaning services;
-- despite the urgent need,
neighborhoods lacking sanitation workers;
-- sweeping vehicles don't
operate in most neighborhoods, and where they do only
serve limited areas;
-- trash bins throughout the city
are dilapidated, burnt out, or otherwise in
disrepair;
-- public waste receptacles are
woefully inadequate in streets, commercial, cultural
and other areas;
-- vermin and stray dogs pose an
environment hazard, especially to children, the
elderly and sick;
-- residents must cope on their
own, at their own expense; and
-- neighborhoods most affected
are on the Separation Wall's other side where
sanitation services are privatized, and absent
municipal oversight, don't function properly.
Sanitation
Conditions in Selected Neighborhoods
About 15,000 residents live in
Tsur Baher and Umm Tuba, most of them getting no trash
collections whatever. Only main street bins are
serviced, and they're dilapidated, in disrepair, and
lack lids or wheels. In addition, most streets lack
sweeping services, so trash accumulates in gutters,
causing an environmental, sanitation, and health
blight for affected neighborhoods, as well as an
esthetic eyesore.
"Residents report that in the
late afternoon and evening, (stray) dogs regularly
prowl the neighborhood, scattering the garbage and
terrorizing the residents."
Bir Ayyub Silwan gets partial
sanitation services since most streets have no trash
bins or waste collections. On the main Wadi Road, only
four lidless bins serve the entire area - a central
artery linking sub-neighborhoods to others in East
Jerusalem, including Jabel Mukaber and Tsur Bahar.
Other streets have some bins, but
most have none. Street sweeping is also absent.
Residents' only choice is to burn trash at roadsides.
On Marajeh Street, people complain about stray cats
scattering garbage by day and mice infesting the area
at night - a problem especially bad in summer.
Located on the Separation Wall's
other side, Ras Khamis services were privatized,
resulting in appalling sanitation. Only ten trash bins
serve 10,000 residents, all of them rusty, burnt, or
damaged. None have lids, and street sweeping isn't
done. Residents are thus left with their own ingenuity
and resources to cope.
In addition, contract services
perform poorly, and nothing is done about vermin or
prowling dogs despite regular appeals for help.
Legal Status
Section B of the Municipalities
Ordinance's Amended Version addresses sanitation
needs, paragraph 242 covering the responsibility to
install trash bins and assure waste collections in an
orderly manner, stating:
"....the municipality shall
undertake the following actions:
(1) take measures to eliminate or
prevent any public hazard and undertake inspections to
identify existing hazards;
(2) order the collection of
rubbish and garbage from every house and set the fees
for said collection;
(3) order the inspection,
regulation, maintenance, cleaning, and emptying of
sewers, drains, lavatories, toilets, septic tanks,
passageways, gutters, watercourses, cesspits, and
sanitary fixtures;" as well as
(4) keep trash bins in good
working order and provide maintenance to prevent
health hazards;
(5) keep other sanitation
facilities safe and working properly;
(6) ensure street sweeping and
cleaning;
(7) prevent waste from
accumulating in public;
(8) prevent streams, ditches,
watercourses or wells from becoming contaminated;
(9) prevent pipes intended for
rainwater runoff from being used for sewage removal or
bathroom waste; and
(10) assure inspections to
maintain cleanliness.
The Jerusalem Bylaws grant city
trash collections solely to municipal workers by
mayoral issued permits.
"The Jerusalem municipality is
therefore obliged by law to provide sanitation
services that include" proper bins and receptacles,
collections, street sweeping and cleaning, and
extermination of vermin, rats, mice, and other health
hazards. City authorities are clearly derelict in
their duties, according to law.
East Jerusalem Palestinians are
thus gravely impacted under truly appalling conditions
- the result of "ongoing neglect and discrimination"
by municipal authorities. All city services are
affected, the most visible being sanitation ones.
Since its 1972 establishment,
ACRI's mission has been to "protect and promote human
rights and civil liberties, wherever they are violated
by Israel or on its behalf," an enormous challenge
against authorities committed to violence,
discrimination, harassment, abuse, and the denial of
basic freedoms to everyone not Jewish - a testimony to
a rogue state's viciousness.
Its longstanding neglect and
abuse are especially evident in East Jerusalem and
Gaza under siege. But the entire Palestinian
population is affected, including Israeli citizens,
enduring relentless persecution, discrimination and
systemic violence to crack their spirit and dispossess
them - something Israel's failed at for over six
decades, showing its mindlessness to the Palestinian
spirit to endure, survive, and eventually overcome
what can't be sustained nor will be, no matter how
many more decades of struggle it takes.
Stephen Lendman lives in
Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and
listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished
guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the
Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central
time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs
are archived for easy listening.
http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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