- Details
-
Written by Uri Blau Uri Blau
-
Category: News News
-
Published: 02 February 2009 02 February 2009
-
Last Updated: 02 February 2009 02 February 2009
-
Created: 02 February 2009 02 February 2009
-
Hits: 3812 3812
One of the main reasons for this effort was the need
to have credible, accessible information to be used to contend with
legal actions brought by Palestinian residents, human rights
organizations and leftist movements challenging the legality of
construction in the settlements and the use of private lands for
establishing or expanding them. The painstakingly amassed data was
considered political dynamite.
The defense establishment, led by Defense Minister Ehud Barak,
steadfastly refused to publicize the figures, arguing, for one thing,
that doing so could endanger state security or harm Israel's foreign
relations.
 |
Advertisement |
|
Someone who is liable to be particularly interested in the data
collected by Spiegel is George Mitchell, President Barack Obama's
special envoy to the Middle East, who arrived in Israel last week for
his first visit since his appointment. It was Mitchell who authored the
2001 report that led to the formulation of the road map, which
established a parallel between halting terror and cessation of
construction in the settlements.
The information in the official database, the most comprehensive
one ever compiled in Israel about the territories, was recently
obtained by Haaretz. An analysis of the data reveals that, in the vast
majority of the settlements - about 75 percent - construction,
sometimes on a large scale, has been carried out without the
appropriate permits or contrary to permits that were issued. The
database also shows that, in more than 30 settlements, extensive
construction of buildings and infrastructure (roads, schools,
synagogues, yeshivas and even police stations) has been carried out on
private lands belonging to Palestinian West Bank residents.
The data, it should be stressed, does not refer only to the illegal
outposts (information about which was included in the well-known report
authored by attorney Talia Sasson and published in March 2005), but to
the very heart of the settlement enterprise. It includes veteran
ideological settlements like Alon Shvut (established in 1970 and
currently home to 3,291 residents); Ofra (established in 1975, home to
2,708 residents, including former Yesha Council spokesman Yehoshua Mor
Yosef and media personalities Uri Elitzur and Hagai Segal); and Beit El
(established in 1977, population 5,308, including Hagai Ben-Artzi,
brother of Sara Netanyahu). Also included are large settlements founded
primarily due to economic motives, such as the city of Modi'in Ilit
(established in 1990 and now home to 36,282 people), or Givat Ze'ev
outside Jerusalem (founded in 1983, population 11,139), and smaller
settlements such as Nokdim near Herodion (established in 1982,
population 851, including MK Avigdor Lieberman).
The information contained in the database does not conform to the
state's official position, as presented, for instance, on the Foreign
Ministry Web site, which states: "Israel's actions relating to the use
and allocation of land under its administration are all taken with
strict consideration of the rules and norms of international law ...
Israel does not requisition private land for the establishment of
settlements."
Since in many of the settlements, it was the government itself,
primarily through the Construction and Housing Ministry, that was
responsible for construction, and since many of the building violations
involve infrastructure, roads, public buildings and so on, the official
data also shows government responsibility for the unrestrained planning
and lack of enforcement of regulations in the territories. The extent
of building violations also attests to the poor functioning of the
Civil Administration, the body in charge of permits and supervision of
construction in the territories.
According to the 2008 data from the Central Bureau of Statistics,
approximately 290,000 Jews live in the 120 official settlements and
dozens of outposts established throughout the West Bank over the past
41 years.
"Nothing was done secretively," says Pinchas Wallerstein, director
general of the Yesha Council of settlements and a leading figure in the
settlement project. "I'm not familiar with any [building] plans that
were not the initiative of the Israeli government." He notes that if
the owners of private land upon which settlements are built were to
complain and the court were to accept their complaint, then the
structures would have to be moved somewhere else. "This has been the
Yesha Council's position for the past years," he adds.
You would never know it from touring several of the settlements in
which massive construction has taken place on private Palestinian land.
Entire neighborhoods built without permits or on private property are
inseparable parts of the settlements. The sense of dissonance only
intensifies when you find that municipal offices, police and fire
stations were also built upon and currently operate on lands that
belong to Palestinians.
On Mishkenot Haro'im Street in the Kokhav Yaakov settlement, a
young mother is carrying her two children home. "I've lived here for
six years," she says, sounding surprised when informed that her entire
neighborhood was built upon private Palestinian land. "I know there's
some small area in the community that is disputed, but I never heard
that this is private land." Would she have built her home on this land
had she known this from the start? "No," she answers. "I wouldn't have
kicked anyone out of his home."
Not far away, at the settlement's large and unkempt trailer site,
which is also built on private land, a young newlywed couple is walking
to the bus stop: 21-year-old Aharon and his 19-year-old wife, Elisheva.
They speak nearly perfect Hebrew, despite having grown up in the United
States and having settled permanently in Israel just a few months ago,
after Aharon completed his army service in the ultra-Orthodox Nahal
Brigade unit. Now he is studying computers at Machon Lev in Jerusalem.
Asked why they chose to live here of all places, they list three
reasons: It's close to Jerusalem, it's cheap and it's in the
territories. In that order.
The couple pay their rent, NIS 550 a month, to the settlement
secretariat. As new immigrants, they are still exempt from having to
pay arnona (municipal tax). Aharon doesn't seem upset upon learning
that his trailer sits on private land. It doesn't really interest him,
he says: "I don't care what the state says - the Torah says that the
entire Land of Israel is ours." And what will happen if they're told to
move to non-private land? "We'll move," he says without hesitation.
Even today, more than two years after concluding his official role,
Baruch Spiegel remains loyal to the establishment. In a conversation,
he notes several times that he signed a confidentiality agreement and
is thus unwilling to go into the details of the work for which he was
responsible. He was appointed to handle several issues about which
Israel had given a commitment to the United States, including improving
conditions for Palestinians whose lives were adversely affected by the
separation fence, and supervising Israel Defense Forces soldiers at the
checkpoints.
Two years ago, Haaretz reporter Amos Harel revealed that Spiegel's
main task was to establish and maintain an up-to-date database on the
settlement enterprise. This was after it became apparent that the
United States, as well as the settlement monitoring team of the Peace
Now organization, was already in possession of much more precise
information about settlement construction than the defense
establishment.
Spiegel's database contains written documents backed up by aerial
photos and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) data that includes
information on the status of the land and the official boundaries of
each settlement.
"The work took two and a half years to complete," says Spiegel. "It
was done in order to check the status of the settlements and the
outposts, and to achieve the greatest possible accuracy in terms of the
database - the status of the property, the legal status, the sector
boundaries, municipal building plans, government decisions, lands whose
ownership is unclear. It was full-time, professional work, carried out
by a professional team of legal experts, planning people, GIS experts.
And I hope this work continues, because it is very vital. One has to
know what's going on there and make decisions accordingly."
Who is keeping track of all this now?
Spiegel: "I suppose it's the Civil Administration."
Why was there no database like this before your appointment?
"I don't know how much of a focus there was on it."
Why do you think the state is not publicizing the data?
"It's a sensitive and complex subject and there are all kinds of
considerations, political and security-related. There were questions
about the public's right to know, the freedom of information law. You
should ask the officials in charge."
What are the sensitive matters?
"It's no secret that there are violations, that there are problems related to land. It's a complicated problem."
Is there also a problem for the country's image?
"I didn't concern myself with image. I was engaged in Sisyphean
work to ensure that, first of all, they'll know what exists, what's
legal and what's not, and what the extent of the illegality is -
whether it involves the takeover of private Palestinian land or is in
the process of obtaining proper building permits. Our job was to do the
meticulous work of examining all the settlements and outposts that
existed then ... We found what we found and passed it on."
Do you think this information should be published?
"I think they've already decided to publish the simpler part,
concerning areas of jurisdiction. There are things that are more
sensitive. It's no secret that there are problems, and it's impossible
to do something illegal and say it's legal. I can't elaborate, because
I'm still bound to maintain confidentiality."
Says Dror Etkes, formerly the coordinator of Peace Now's
settlement-monitoring project and currently director of the Land
Advocacy Project for the Yesh Din organization: "The government's
ongoing refusal to reveal this material on the pretext of security
reasons is yet another striking example of the way in which the state
exploits its authority to reduce the information at the citizens'
disposal, when they wish to formulate intelligent positions based on
facts, rather than lies and half-truths."
Following the initial exposure of the material, the Movement for
Freedom of Information and Peace Now requested that the Defense
Ministry publish the database information, in accordance with the
Freedom of Information Law. The ministry refused.
"This is a computerized database that includes detailed
information, in different cross-sections, regarding the Jewish
settlements in Judea and Samaria," the ministry said in response. "The
material was collected by the defense establishment for its purposes
and includes sensitive information. The ministry was asked to allow a
review of the material in accordance with the Freedom of Information
Law, and after consideration of the request, decided not to hand over
the material. The matter is pending and is the subject of a petition
before the Administrative Affairs Court in Tel Aviv."
The database provides an alphabetical survey of settlements. For
each entry, it notes the source of the settlement's name and the form
of settlement (urban community, local council, moshav, kibbutz, etc.);
its organizational affiliation (Herut, Amana, Takam, etc.); the number
of inhabitants; pertinent government decisions; the official bodies to
which the land was given; the status of the land upon which the
settlement was built (state land, private Palestinian or Jewish land,
etc.); the illegal outposts built in proximity to the settlement; and
the extent to which valid building plans have been executed. Beneath
each entry, highlighted in red, is information on the extent of
construction that has been carried out without permission and its exact
location in the settlement.
Among all the revelations in the official data, it's quite
fascinating to see what was written about Ofra, a veteran Gush Emunim
settlement. According to a recent report by the B'Tselem human rights
organization, most of that settlement's developed area sits on private
Palestinian land and therefore falls into the category of an illegal
outpost that is supposed to be evacuated. The Yesha Council responded
to that report, saying that the "facts" in it are "completely baseless
and designed to present a false picture. The inhabitants of Ofra are
careful to respect the rights of the Arab landowners, with whom they
reached an agreement regarding the construction of the neighborhoods,
as well as an agreement that enables the private landowners to continue
to work their lands."
But the information on Ofra contained in the database leaves no
room for doubt: "The settlement does not conform to valid building
plans. A majority of the construction in the community is on registered
private lands, without any legal basis whatsoever and no possibility of
[converting the land to non-private use]."
The database also gives a detailed description of where
construction was carried out in Ofra without permits, "in the original
part of the settlement - more than 200 permanent residential
structures, agricultural structures, public structures, lots, roads and
orchards (in regard to which Plan 221 was submitted, but not advanced
due to a problem of ownership)."
Yesha Council chairman Danny Dayan responds: "I am not familiar with that data."
Another place where the data reveals illegal construction is Elon
Moreh, one of the most famous settlements in the territories. In June
1979, several residents of the village of Rujib, southeast of Nablus,
petitioned the High Court, asking it to annul the appropriation order
for 5,000 dunams (1,250 acres) of land in their possession, which had
been designated for the construction of the settlement. In court, the
government argued, as it did regularly at the time, that the
construction of the settlement was required for military purposes, and
therefore the appropriation orders were legal. But in a statement on
behalf of the petitioners, former chief of staff Haim Bar-Lev asserted
then that, "In my best professional judgment, Elon Moreh does not
contribute to Israel's security."
The High Court of Justice, relying on this statement and
information from the original core group of settlers of Elon Moreh -
who also argued that a temporary settlement was not established for
security purposes, and that a permanent one was built instead -
instructed the IDF to evacuate it and return the lands to their owners.
The immediate consequence of the ruling was to find an alternative site
for the settlement, on property previously defined as "state lands."
Following this ruling, Israel stopped officially using military
injunctions in the territories for the purpose of establishing new
settlements.
The lands that were originally appropriated for the purpose of
building Elon Moreh were returned to their Palestinian owners, but
according to the database, in Har Kabir, the settlement's new site,
too, "most of the construction was carried out without approved,
detailed plans, and some of the construction involved trespassing on
private lands. As for the state lands in the settlement, a detailed
plan, No. 107/1, was prepared and published on 16/7/99, but has yet to
go into effect."
The Shomron Regional Council, which includes Elon Moreh, says in
response: "All the neighborhoods in the settlement were planned, and
some were also built, by the State of Israel through the Housing and
Construction Ministry. The residents of Elon Moreh did not trespass at
all and any allegation of this kind is also false. The State of Israel
is tasked with promoting and approving the building plans in the
settlement, as everywhere else in the country, and as for the plans
that supposedly have yet to receive final validity, just like many
other communities throughout Israel, where processes continue for
decades, this does not delay the plans, even if the planning is not
complete or carried out in tandem."
Beit El, another veteran settlement, was also, according to the
database, established "on private lands seized for military purposes
(in fact, the settlement was expanded onto private lands, by
trespassing in the northern section of the settlement), on state lands
that were appropriated during the Jordanian period (the Maoz Tzur
neighborhood in the southern part of Beit El)."
According to the official data, in the absence of approved plans,
construction in Beit El includes the local council's offices and the
"northern neighborhood (Beit El Bet) that was built for the most part
on private lands. The neighborhood comprises widespread construction,
public buildings and new ring roads."
Moshe Rosenbaum, head of the Beit El local council, responds:
"Unfortunately, you are cooperating with the worst of Israel's enemies
and causing tremendous damage to the whole country."
Ron Nahman, mayor of Ariel, was re-elected to a sixth term in the
last elections. Nahman is a long-time resident of the territories and
runs a fascinating heterogeneous city. Between a visit to the trailer
site where evacuees from Netzarim are housed, and a stop at a shop that
sells pork and other non-kosher products - mostly to the city's large
Russian population - he complains about the cessation of construction
in his city and about his battles with the Civil Administration over
every building permit.
Ariel College, Nahman's pride and joy, is also mentioned in the
database: "The area upon which Ariel College was built was not
regulated in terms of planning." It further explains that the
institution sits on two separate plots, and the new plan has not yet
been discussed.
Nahman confirms this, but notes that the planning issue was
recently resolved. When told that dozens of settlements include areas
that were constructed on private lands, he is not surprised. "That's
possible," he says. The fact that in three-quarters of the settlements
there has been construction that deviates from the approved plans
doesn't surprise him either.
"All the complaints should be directed at the government, not at
us," he explains. "As for the small and communal settlements, they were
planned by the Housing Ministry's rural construction administration.
The larger communities are planned by the ministry's district offices.
It's all the government. Sometimes the Housing Ministry is responsible
for budgetary construction, which is construction covered by the state
budget. In the Build Your Own Home program, the state pays a share of
the development costs and the rest is paid for by the individual. All
these things are one giant bluff. Am I the one who planned the
settlements? It was [Ariel] Sharon, [Shimon] Peres, [Yitzhak] Rabin,
Golda [Meir], [Moshe] Dayan."
Most of the territories of the West Bank have not been annexed to
Israel, and therefore regulations for the establishment and
construction of communities there differ from those that apply within
Israel proper. The Sasson report, which dealt with the illegal
outposts, was based in part on data collected by Spiegel, and listed
the criteria for the establishment of a new settlement in the
territories:
1. The Israeli government has to issue a decision to establish the settlement.
2. The settlement has to have a defined jurisdictional area.
3. The settlement has to have a detailed, approved plan.
4. The settlement has to be located on state land or on land
purchased by Israelis and registered under their name in the Land
Registry.
According to the database, the state gave the World Zionist
Organization (WZO) and/or the Housing Ministry authorization to plan
and build on most of the lands on which the settlements were
constructed. These bodies allocated the property to the people who
eventually carried out the actual settlement construction: Sometimes it
was WZO's Settlement Division; other times it was the Housing Ministry
itself, sometimes through the Rural Building Administration. In several
cases, settlements were built by Amana, the settlement arm of the Gush
Emunim organization. Another body cited in the database as having
received allocations and as being responsible for construction in some
settlements is Gush Emunim's Settler National Fund.
Regular state schools and religious schools (Talmudei Torah) have
also been built on Palestinian lands. According to the database, in the
southern part of the Ateret settlement, for instance, "15 structures
were built outside of state lands, which are used for the Kinor David
yeshiva. There are also new ring roads and a special security area that
is illegal." The sign at the entrance says the yeshiva was built by the
Amana settlement movement, the Mateh Binyamin local council and the WZO
settlement division.
In the Psagot settlement, where there has also been a lot of
construction on private land, it's easy to discern the terraced design
typical of Palestinian agriculture in the region. According to the
database, in Psagot there are "agricultural structures (a winery and
storehouses) to the east of the settlement, close to the grapevines
cultivated by the settlement, via trespassing."
During a visit there, the winery was found to be abandoned. Its
owner, Yaakov Berg, acquired land from the Israel Lands Administration
near the Migron outpost and a new winery and regional visitors' center
is currently under construction there.
"The vineyards are located in Psagot," says Berg, who is busy with
preparing the new site. From the unfinished observation deck, one can
see an enormous quarry in the mountains across the way.
"If I built a bathroom here without permission from the Civil
Administration, within 15 minutes, a helicopter would be here and I'd
be told that it was prohibited," Berg complains. "And right here
there's an illegal Palestinian quarry that continues to operate."