A Palestinian security officer helps farmers pick olives in the
northern West Bank village of Maythaloon. Photograph : Mohammed
Ballas/AP
**
Hundreds of olive trees have been uprooted, burned or cut down by
extremist settlers since the annual harvest got under way in the West
Bank this month, prompting calls for the Israeli authorities to protect
Palestinian farmers and their property.
According to the United Nations, more than 870 trees were vandalised
in the first week of the harvest, which began in most places on or after
5 October. A coalition of four Israeli human rights organisations said
more than 450 trees had been damaged over the past week.
The damage is usually discovered when Palestinian families arrive at
their groves to gather the fruit. Sometimes Palestinians are attacked
during the harvest itself.
Settler attacks on olive groves have increased over recent years.
Since the beginning of this year, a total of 7,180 Palestinian-owned
trees have been vandalised by settlers, according to the UN’s office for
the co-ordination of humanitarian affairs. Last year about 10,000 trees
were uprooted or vandalised.
Robert Serry, the UN’s special co-ordinator for the Middle East peace
process, said the damage and destruction of trees was reprehensible.
"Israel must live up to its commitments under international law to
protect Palestinians and their property in the occupied territory so
that the olive harvest – a crucial component of Palestinian livelihoods
and the Palestinian economy – can proceed unhindered," he said.
Hanan Ashrawi, a member of the Palestine Liberation Organisation’s
executive committee, said settlers were launching attacks under the
protection of the Israeli military.
In a letter to diplomats, she appealed to international missions to
send observers to at-risk olive-picking areas to monitor abuses by
settlers and soldiers.
"In the past month alone, Israeli settlers uprooted 300 trees in
al-Mughir and Turmusaya villages, cut down 120 trees in Nablus,
destroyed 100 olive saplings and 60 vine trees in al-Khader village,
uprooted 40 trees in Ras Karkar, and assaulted and hospitalised three
Palestinian farmer and injured one other," she wrote. According to
Oxfam, there are about 9.5m olive trees in the West Bank.
On a visit to the West Bank village of Aboud on Monday, Waleed Assaf,
the Palestinian agriculture minister, said the proportion of GDP earned
from agriculture had fallen from 28% to 5.6% over the past 20 years.
This decline, he said, was mainly due to the confiscation of land for
Israeli settlements, bypass roads and the security barrier, as well as
the difficulties faced by Palestinian farmers in accessing their land.
Serious water shortages were also hampering agricultural output, he
said.
"We have lost half a million trees," Assaf said. "We are planting
more but it takes 10 years for a young olive tree to start producing
fruit."
On the edge of the village, Eid Khalil, 41, was harvesting his fruit.
He said Aboud had lost 18 dunams (4.5 acres) of olive trees when land
was confiscated to build the nearby settlement of Bet Arye. "It used to
take until Christmas to pick the village olives. Now it takes a month,"
he said.
Aboud’s population of 2,200 is evenly divided between Muslims and
Christians. "The majority of people work in agriculture," said the Greek
Orthodox parish priest Emmanuel Awwad. "The oil is the only income for
most of the families."
(Harriet Sherwood in Aboud, The Guardian 15 October 2012)
Lancé le 19 décembre 2011, "Si Proche Orient" est un blog d'information internationale. Sa mission est de couvrir l’actualité du Moyen-Orient et de l'Afrique du Nord avec un certain regard et de véhiculer partout dans le monde un point de vue pouvant amener au débat. "Si Proche Orient" porte sur l’actualité internationale de cette région un regard fait de diversité des opinions, de débats contradictoires et de confrontation des points de vue.Il propose un décryptage approfondi de l’actualité .
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