Israel army’s donkey sales arouse Palestinian outrage

Israel army’s donkey sales arouse Palestinian outrage

August 04, 2016
A Palestinian boy rides a donkey in the Israeli-occupied West Bank area of Tubas. Israeli authorities say they round up wandering livestock in the interests of public safety, especially to reduce road accidents. Palestinians see a policy aimed at pushing them out of the valley running along the border with Jordan. — AFP
A Palestinian boy rides a donkey in the Israeli-occupied West Bank area of Tubas. Israeli authorities say they round up wandering livestock in the interests of public safety, especially to reduce road accidents. Palestinians see a policy aimed at pushing them out of the valley running along the border with Jordan. — AFP

AL-MALEH, Palestinian Territories — “Forty donkeys for sale,” reads a notice in Palestinian newspapers. Nothing out of the ordinary about that, except for the fact that the advertiser is the Israeli army.

Palestinians say the army is trying to sell back the very animals it seized from them in the occupied West Bank’s Jordan Valley.

Israeli authorities say they round up wandering livestock in the interests of public safety, especially to reduce road accidents.

Palestinians, however, see a policy of confiscations and demolitions aimed at pushing them out of the valley running along the border with Jordan.

The valley has valuable water resources and farmland and is seen by Israel as vital to its strategic defense.

The donkeys will be auctioned off if unclaimed by their owners, the Arabic-language text announced, but reclaiming their own property is costly.

Arif Daraghmeh, head of a council of 26 hamlets in the valley’s Al-Maleh district, said they have to pay fines of up to 2,000 shekels ($526) for each donkey.

COGAT, Israel’s defense ministry unit that coordinates Israeli activities in the West Bank and Gaza, says that animals roaming unsupervised are a public menace.

Since the army has been rounding them up “road accidents have fallen by 90 percent”, it said, explaining that the fines are levied to cover the costs of catching and looking after the donkeys.

The public offer to sell 40 head is unusual, said Daraghmeh, only the third in the past two years, before which there were none. But confiscations, he said, are nothing new.

Sixty-year-old Sliman Besharat said his goats, housed under a shelter of sacking, have in the past been quarantined by Israel.

Like Daraghmeh, he sees a strategic aim behind the seizures.

“By confiscating animals and agricultural equipment and demolishing houses, animal shelters and other structures, the Israelis are putting pressure on the Palestinians to leave the Jordan Valley,” which makes up a third of the West Bank, he said.

“Whoever controls the valley controls the border (with Jordan) and access to water and farmland,” resources vital for local Palestinians who live from agriculture and livestock, Besharat said.

About 90 percent of the valley is in the West Bank zone known as “Area C” which is under full Israeli control.

It is “virtually prohibited for use by Palestinians and reserved for the Israeli army or placed under the jurisdiction of the settlements”, where 9,500 Israelis live and farm, the UN says.

Water consumption in some places is a mere “20 liters a day, one fifth of WHO (World Health Organization) recommendations,” the UN says.

On the rocky hillside that rises behind Yusef’s cows, he said a pipeline carries to a settlement water which the animals were once free to drink.

“Before we drank the water at its source,” a young Palestinian said. “Now the settlers bathe in it.”


August 04, 2016
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