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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, October 16, 2018
Khan al-Ahmar: Israeli forces detain activists as demolition fears grow
Three
Israeli and foreign activists were briefly detained while a Palestinian
remains in custody, as villagers fear demolition is imminent

Israeli police officers tackle activists who had blocked bulldozers from reaching Khan al-Ahmar (MEE/Akram al-Wa'ara)
KHAN AL-AHMAR, Occupied West Bank - Clashes
erupted between Israeli forces, Palestinians and activists in the
Bedouin village of Khan al-Ahmar in the occupied West Bank on Monday
morning as residents fear imminent demolition of the village. At least
four people were detained by Israeli police.
Israeli
forces are expected to raze Khan al-Ahmar and evict nearly 200
Palestinian residents after approval for the plan officially came into
effect earlier this month.
Israel's Supreme Court has
twice ruled in favour of demolishing the village, first on 24 May and
again on 5 September, following a desperate appeal by the occupants.
Residents
of Khan al-Ahmar and activists who have gathered in the village since
Israeli authorities ordered its demolition woke up on Monday to a large
pool of water formed in the valley near the village - and in the same
location where a lake of sewage appeared last week.
While
reports indicated that a water pipe belonging to Israeli national water
company Mekorot had burst, some locals speculated that activists had
purposefully broken the pipe to block a path to the village and stall
the demolition, noting that wood pallets, tin sheets and other debris
seemed to have been placed to prevent the water from flowing towards the
village.
“This
pathway wraps around the entire village, so they (Israeli forces) need
to use it to surround the whole area,” Yousuf Abu Dahouq, a resident of
Khan al-Ahmar, told Middle East Eye. “The Israeli police were surprised
to see the water here, and it broke their plan for the day.
“Because
this is one of the main roads they were planning to use to bring jeeps
and bulldozers to destroy the village, they need to clear the road to go
forward with the demolition.”
Around
50 Israeli police and border police officers arrived at Khan al-Ahmar
between 7am and 8am with at least three bulldozers and tried to clear
away the water, prompting villagers and activists to come down to the
area.
Palestinian
and Israeli activists jump on top of an Israeli bulldozer as it
attempts to clear out the water-filled path that serves as an entryway
for military forces into the village. (MEE/Akram al-Wa'ara)
Palestinian and Israeli activists jumped into the pool to stop one of
the bulldozers, at which point Israeli forces arrested one activist.
Meanwhile,
confrontations broke out between Israeli forces and activists in other
areas of the village, as activists attempted to prevent the officers
from entering the village.
Israeli
officers were seen pushing several Palestinian and foreign women and
elderly to the ground, and at least five people were treated for
injuries, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health.
Israeli
forces did not allow Palestinian ambulances into Khan al-Ahmar, forcing
medics to enter the village on foot to treat people.
Israeli
police officers push down a Palestinian woman and foreign activists as
they attempted to prevent the forces from entering Khan al-Ahmar
(MEE/Akram al-Wa'ara)
Israeli forces detained at least four people on Monday morning, which
were identified as Palestinian activist Reyad Salahat, Israeli activists
Jonathan Pollak and Kobi Snitz, and Dutch activist Robin Licker. On
Monday afternoon, Licker posted on Facebook to confirm that he, Pollak
and Snitz had all been released, but that Salahat remained in Israeli
custody.
Pollak and Salahat were both reportedly injured by Israeli forces as they were detained.
Abu Dahouq, a Khan al-Ahmar resident, told MEE he feared that demolition was imminent.
“We
think that they will come to destroy the village any minute now,
especially since the deadline for us to leave passed 10 days ago,” the
43-year-old said.
Israeli forces handed out notices on
23 September to the residents, telling them to clear and demolish their
homes by 1 October or else they will be forcibly removed.
The
35 families who live in Khan Al-Ahmar are from the Jahalin tribe, a
Bedouin family expelled from the Naqab desert - also referred to as the
Negev - after the 1948 Arab-Israeli war.
Khan
al-Ahmar is located on the eastern desert hillside of Jerusalem, beside
an Israeli highway that leads to the Dead Sea, in part of the West Bank
which Israel has illegally occupied for 50 years according to
international law.
A
Palestinian man stands with his hands raised to the sky in prayer as a
group of Israeli police officers stand looking on in the background
(MEE/Akram al-Wa'ara)
By removing Khan al-Ahmar, the authorities will be able to construct
units linking the illegal settlements of Kfar Adumim and Maale Adumim
with East Jerusalem in the Israeli-controlled Area C, splitting the West
Bank in half.
Amnesty International has called the Israeli plan a "forcible transfer" and "war crime".
“We,
the residents of Khan al Ahmar, have a lot of pressure on us, and there
is a lot of pain and hardships being felt by the people of the
village,” Abu Dahouq added. “The Israelis are using all kinds of
military and psychological attacks against us to kick us out. We are
living in war times, and it has become a part of our life.
“The
occupation is trying to test the Palestinian people, to see if they
will react to the demolition of Khan al-Ahmar ... If Palestinian people
don’t show up to defend the village, then it is giving the Israelis the
green light to get rid of us.”

