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Written by Fred Schlomka Fred Schlomka
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Category: News News
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Published: 01 September 2009 01 September 2009
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Last Updated: 01 September 2009 01 September 2009
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Created: 01 September 2009 01 September 2009
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Hits: 4610 4610
Route 5 from Tel Aviv was completed in 2008 as a segregated road to the
settlement of Ariel (pop. 25,000) in the Central West Bank, and
construction is continuing on the next phase to the Jordan Valley.
Route 90 running the length of the Jordan Valley and Route 60 north and
south from Jerusalem are also rapidly becoming restricted roads.
The Arab roads are lined with walls and barbed wire when they transit a
settler zone. They connect Palestinian towns and villages through
tunnels under the settler roads, and in one case, Gvat Ze’ev, under the
settlement itself through a 400-meter (1,200 feet) tunnel. The
segregated roads are even inside Jerusalem, connecting Palestinian
ghetto neighborhoods to Ramallah. A notorious example is the walled-in
community of Bir Naballa, a largely Bedouin Jerusalem suburb of about
7,000 people that was a major commercial center until the Israelis
enclosed it and restricted access.
The Israeli government, and apparently the Obama administration,
justify these roads since they enable Palestinians to travel between
the enclaves without encountering checkpoints or settlers. This allows
Israel to remove a few checkpoints, gaining political points, while
containing the Palestinian population in essentially large open-air
prisons while the settlements and their connecting roads continue to
expand.
A USAID official in Israel recently argued that since the roads
facilitate more efficient transportation between the Palestinian areas,
the West Bank economy will improve and the Palestinian Authority will
be strengthened. However this line of reasoning ignores the rationale
for the roads in the first place, and supports the permanent
institutionalization of the Israel’s Occupation infrastructure into an
improved version of Apartheid, or ‘Hafrada’ as the Israeli government
calls it. ‘Hafrada’ means separation in Hebrew, as ‘Apartheid’ means
separation in Africaans.
Israel has established the ‘Geder Hafrada’ (Separation Wall), and
‘Kvishei Hafrada’ (Separation Roads). The roads separate Palestinians
and Israelis in a manner that never existed in South Africa even at the
height of Apartheid. All South Africans mingled on the roads, in the
cities and the workplaces, despite the constitutional discrimination,
travel restrictions, and violence.
The relationship between USAID and the Palestinian contractors who
build the roads is also questionable. By providing millions of dollars
per year to West Bank contractors the Obama administration is
continuing relationships with companies affiliated with Palestinian
Authority officials, awarding many contracts to their relatives and
friends.
An April 22nd Reuter’s report detailed how over 2 million dollars in
USAID contracts have been awarded to companies owned by Tarek Abbas and
Yasser Mahmoud Abbas, sons of the Palestinian President. Colorado-based
engineering giant CH2M HILL is also the prime contractor for many USAID
projects in the West Bank and subcontracts to these local companies.
USAID officials have stated that the contracts were awarded through
competitive bidding.
All the agreements since the Oslo process in 1993 have stipulated that
settlement expansion must cease. This has been a consistent theme From
the Road Map, to the Annapolis Agreement to the Arab League Initiative
to President Obama’s latest pronouncements. Yet the White House has
been silent on the roads, and continues to allow USAID to fund them.
One wonders why?
Fred Schlomka is an Israeli businessman and the proprietor of www.ToursinEnglish.com.
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