The Israeli government has admitted in court that, as the Palestinians claim, it has been building the fence to claim land in the West Bank and the fence is intended to be permanent. The latter is clear since they have stated that dismantling or moving it is "too expensive."
This is from Haaretz, an Israeli newspaper, by Yuval Yoaz, Haaretz Correspondent.
"Israel has acknowledged for the first time that not just "security" considerations were instrumental in determining the route of the West Bank separation fence.Like our own U.S. government, the statements of Israeli government leaders simply cannot be trusted.
Responding to a petition brought to the High Court by the residents of the Palestinian village Azun in the northern West Bank, the state asked for the fence to be left on its original route, previously ruled to be unsuitable, as it would be very expensive to move.
The state's position marks a fundamental change in its legal arguments. Initially, the state claimed security concerns were the sole motivation for erecting the fence, and there were no other considerations.
In its principal ruling on the issue last year, in the Beit Surik affair, the High Court determined that the state has no authority to build a fence for "political" considerations, such as appending land to Israel.
The state's new stance also highlights a major policy change regarding the "temporary" nature of the fence. Until now, the state has claimed that the fence was a short-term measure, and it was possible to move or dismantle the barrier.
The construction of the separation fence has already been completed in the area, and the barrier is fully functional.
In the region north of Qalqilyah, the route creates an "enclave" where it departs from the 1967 Green Line border and moves eastward to encompass the settlement of Tzofin, as well as much land from the villages of Jayyus and Azun."
Yet this has come out in publicly held Israeli High Court proceedings and been published in an Israeli newspaper. Somehow I cannot imagine such a public proceeding and news report in Palestine, or in fact in any Muslim nation. Turkey might be an exception, but Turkey is a secular nation first, with a majority Muslim population. I think.
The two large lessons for me in this is first, that you cannot simplify politics in the Middle East, especially Israel and Palestine, and still be close to accurate, and second Israeli/Palestinian politics remain very nasty and inherently dishonest. Perhaps if the amount of killing is reduced....
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