Palestinians face Russian roulette in Israel’s firing zones

“Israel has many different ways to make life very hard for Palestinians so that they will be driven off their land,” said Dror Etkes, an Israeli expert on the settlements. “But the firing zones are the number one method.”

 
 
Military training areas leave villagers in West Bank with stark choice: leave or risk being 

 

by Jonathan Cook                              Middle East Eye

 
AL-AQABA, West Bank - In the midst of the international furore that erupted over the abduction and killing of three Israeli teenagers in June – leading ultimately to Israel’s month-long assault on Gaza –  the death of an 18 year-old Palestinian shepherd in the West Bank went unremarked.
Sakher Daragmeh was killed as he tended goats close to the remote village of al-Aqaba, on the high slopes of the northern Jordan Valley, on 21 June.
His father, Burhan Daragmeh, said he and other relatives found Sakher’s body covered in blood, with a bullet wound to the chest. They have accused the army of executing Sakher in cold blood.
The army quickly took charge of his body, which was sent into Israel for an autopsy. The Israeli authorities have so far declined to divulge their findings, said the Israeli human rights group B’Tselem. However, the Israeli police have initiated an investigation.
Shepherds and farmers have been regularly killed, often unnoticed, in the West Bank for decades from an aggressive Israeli policy of creating military firing zones on their land, said Dror Etkes, an Israeli expert on the West Bank settlements.
He and others have accused the Israeli government of using the firing zones as a way to ethnically cleanse Palestinians from large areas of the West Bank, as villagers are forced to relocate to find safer places to live.

Hemmed in on all sides

Whatever the exact circumstances of Daragmeh’s death, everyone is agreed that the Palestinian teenager died in an area that Israel has declared a closed firing zone since the 1970s.
It is one of several that have hemmed in al-Aqaba on all sides, making life for the 300 villagers – as well as dozens of Bedouin families encamped in the surrounding hills – a continuous game of Russian roulette as they graze their herds of animals.
Sakher’s father said: “There was no reason to shoot him. But every one of us who lives in this area knows that we are not safe.”
Sarit Michaeli, a spokeswoman for B’Tselem said that, based on her previous experience, the Daragmeh family might have to wait years before they received official explanation from Israel about how their son died.
Over the years, six other villagers from al-Aqaba, including a six year-old girl, have been killed in firing zones, two by live fire and four by faulty shells that exploded. A further 38 inhabitants have been injured.
Following a petition to the Israeli courts in 1999, the army agreed to stop conducting live-fire exercises in al-Aqaba and to end military manoeuvres among the houses. However, according to the Israeli human rights group the Association of Civil Rights in Israel, the pledge has been violated on several occasions.
As a result, according to the mayor, Sami Sadeeq, more than 700 villagers have become “refugees,” fleeing al-Aqaba to seek greater safety in nearby cities under Palestinian control. Sadeeq himself was injured in 1971, at the age of 16, by bullets that paralysed him from the waist-down.
Sakher’s death occurred shortly after Danny Danon, Israel’s deputy defence minister at the time, was questioned about the true purpose of the firing zones.
Since Israel’s occupation began in 1967, military training areas have proliferated across Area C, the nearly two-thirds of the West Bank that were assigned to temporary Israeli control under the Oslo accords of the mid-1990s.
The West Bank is expected to be the bulk of a future Palestinian state.

Forcing communities out

Danon admitted that the firing zones provided a justification for forcing Palestinians off their lands. “Whoever is in an area that doesn’t belong to him, that has been declared a firing zone, will have to be evacuated from there –  and yes, we plan to remove more people,” he said, responding to an official parliamentary question.
Currently, Israel has declared 18 percent of the West Bank as military training and firing zones –  about the same land area as designated under Palestinian control, officially termed Area A in the Oslo accords. In the Jordan Valley, the figure for such zones rises to 56 percent.
Michaeli said that international law clearly prohibited Israel from locating military training and firing zones in occupied Palestinian territory.

“Israel is entitled to build a military base to protect an occupied area, but not to use Palestinian land for its long-term training needs. It has to do that inside its own sovereign territory.”

Some 38 Palestinian villages have found themselves, like al-Aqaba, trapped in firing zones, endangering the inhabitants’ safety and in many cases, providing grounds for Israeli officials to demolish their homes and forcibly remove them. 
Herders, like the Daragmeh family, face particular difficulties moving around firing zones.
Israel is currently trying to expel the entire population from eight villages in an area known as the South Hebron Hills that has been declared “Firing Zone 918.”

“Israel has many different ways to make life very hard for Palestinians so that they will be driven off their land,” said Dror Etkes, an Israeli expert on the settlements. “But the firing zones are the number one method.”

Danon’s comments in June confirmed controversial testimony from a senior Israeli army officer to a parliamentary committee.

Palestinian ‘weeds’

Einav Shalev, in charge of military operations in the West Bank, stated in April that firing zones were designed to displace Palestinians from sections of Area C. He added that the army had recently increased its use of military firing and training zones in the Jordan valley to stop Palestinians from living there.
He told legislators: “I think that the movement of armored vehicles, other vehicles and more in this region and the thousands of soldiers marching clears the way. When the battalions march, people [Palestinians] move aside.”
He also referred to Palestinian homes as “weeds.” “There are places where, when we reduced the quantity of training substantially, weeds started growing,” he said.
The Jordan Valley, nearly 30 percent of the West Bank, became a key diplomatic battleground in the nine-month, US-led peace process that collapsed acrimoniously in April. Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, had insisted that the Israeli military be allowed to continue operating in the Jordan Valley for the foreseeable future.
As Israel launched its attack on Gaza last month, Netanyahu said there could never be “any agreement in which we relinquish security control” over the West Bank for fear that, given its greater size, an Israeli withdrawal might “create another 20 Gazas.”
Tamar Zandberg, a dovish legislator whose question prompted Danon’s statement, commented on Facebook that the firing zones were being exploited for political purposes. “Apparently the deputy minister is starting to prepare to implement the Bennett plan to annex Area C while cleansing it of as many Palestinians as possible.”
Naftali Bennett, a senior government minister, has proposed annexing much of the West Bank as an alternative to reaching a peace agreement with the Palestinians. A recent poll of Israeli Jews living outside the settlements showed that one in three supported the West Bank’s full or partial annexation.

Destruction of homes

Israel has been stepping up its destruction of homes in the Jordan Valley, according to recent data from the United Nations. Some 390 homes were demolished last year, more than double the number the previous year.