Image Credit: Hugo A. Sanchez/©Gulf News
Making sure
that Palestinians do not have enough to quench their thirst, is just another
ploy to force them out of their homeland
October 27,
2012
According to many international organisations, water is being
used by Israel as a war weapon, threatening the life of the Palestinian people.
Since the creation of the Zionist entity in Palestine, Israel has been working
relentlessly on annexing Palestinian land and water sources lying beneath. Such
a strategic design was confirmed in a document prepared, in 1941, by David
Ben-Gurion (Israel’s first prime minister). In this document (which was released
by the British Public Record Office) Ben-Gurion stated: "We have to remember
that for the Jewish state’s ability to survive, it must have within its borders,
the waters of [rivers] Jordan and Litani."
To make things worse, Israel’s
erection of the racist/apartheid Wall in the occupied Palestinian territories,
as from 2002, further added to the adversities of Palestinians. Under the
pretext of security, the Wall has actually enabled Israel to seize 37
Palestinian water wells, reach major aquifers in the West Bank and make 30 other
wells very hard to reach and use by Palestinians. In this respect, a Palestinian
research project confirmed that "the geographical line of the Wall exactly
coincides 100 per cent with the line of the aquifers in the occupied West Bank".
A recent BirZeit University symposium also concluded that "the Wall will be
extending 670km to surround the cities and villages of the West Bank, thus
eventually annexing 40 per cent of the total land of the West Bank. The design
of the Wall was made with the intention of imposing direct and full control over
the water resources of the West Bank". This may well explain why Israel has
always insisted on postponing the issue of water resources to the final stage of
negotiations with the Palestinians, while continuing its expansion of colonies
as well as keeping control of Palestinian water resources. Israel has been
deliberately planting its colonies in the Palestinian occupied territories above
the Palestinian aquifers to deny them whatever little water is left. As for the
Palestinian water that could not be stolen, the Israeli colonies undertook the
task of polluting it with their industrial waste. Besides, the Israeli
occupation is preventing the Palestinians from building and developing an
efficient sewage system to protect their resources of drinking water in the
occupied territories. This strategy is obviously part of a determined attempt to
increase the agonies of Palestinians so that they find themselves forced to
leave.
In 2011, the Census Bureau in Ramallah (Palestine) issued a report
pertaining to Jewish colonies and water resources in the Palestinian land, which
stated that "in spite of the rarity of water in comparison with human growth and
expansion, the water crisis has taken an extreme and dangerous path after 1967.
Water crisis has affected many Arab countries, especially after Israel gained
control over water resources of the rivers – Jordan, Hasbani, Banias and Mount
Hermon — in addition to all the Palestinian aquifers. This made 81 per cent of
all Palestinian water resources under the full Israeli control over the period
1967-2011, which left the Palestinians with only 850 cubic metres of water per
year to use". This situation has even deteriorated further because solving the
water crisis has become impossible due to the continuous, aggressive Israeli
measures of stealing Palestinian water. Dr Shaddad Al Oteily, Chief of Water
Resources in the Palestinian National Authority (PNA), recently stated that
"International studies, along with Israeli official studies, show clearly that
every Israeli colonist in the occupied Palestinian territories consumes water 70
times more than the Palestinian individual". His remarks were confirmed by the
Israeli human rights group B’tselem and an unprecedented French parliament
report authored by socialist MP Jean Glavani — once a minister of agriculture —
accusing Israel of implementing "apartheid" policies in its allocation of water
resources in the West Bank. Al Oteily also revealed that "water available to the
Palestinians in the West Bank amounts to 105 million cubic metres from springs
and aquifers, which is much less than what was available in 1995 according to
the Oslo Agreement, which designated 118 million cubic metres to them. According
to international standards, the Palestinians should have 400 million cubic
metres. Yet, they are getting only 25 per cent of their need, which is being
augmented with 56 million cubic metres that the PNA buys from Israel, four
million cubic metres of which are being allocated for Gaza". Furthermore,
according to a UN report, "there are currently 56 springs in the West Bank near
Israeli colonies, 30 of them were annexed by the Israelis who are denying the
Palestinians access to them, while the rest of the 26 springs are under strict
Israeli supervision as a prelude to annexation". The international report
conceded that "the Palestinians were terrorised by acts of violence meant to
prevent them from reaching the annexed springs which are being used as tourist
attraction areas to support the infrastructure of the Israeli colonies, while
decreasing the Palestinian presence in the areas". The report concluded that
"the annexation of the springs and the aquifers of the Palestinians is only a
part of the colonial Israeli expansion in the West Bank".
Under such
conditions, it might be right to presume that the failure of Palestinians to
control their water resources — among several other resources — makes the
establishment of an independent Palestinian state almost impossible. The
ultimate intent of the Israeli occupation is to make the lives of Palestinians
unbearable. The lack of water to quench their thirst, as such, is meant to force
them out of their homeland, in order to fulfil the Israeli project aiming to
evict Palestinians from their historic land, in the context of the so-called
Judaisation of Palestine.
Professor As’ad Abdul Rahman is the chairman
of the Palestinian Encyclopaedia
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