In record breaking heat, Israel intentionally impedes Palestinian families’ access to water
Last week, four sheep died because of the heat. The problem is that I’m not allowed to build them a larger shelter. If I build one, [Israel will] demolish it straight away.
Another villager told a similarly horrific story of Israeli government workers showing up with soldiers and laborers to destroy a family cistern. All 26,000 gallons were gone in a matter of minutes – water that was supposed to last the family and its herds the entire summer.ONLY JEWISH ISRAELIS ENJOY ISRAEL’S “WATER SUPERPOWER” STATUSWhile Israeli settlements – built illegally on land stolen from Palestinians – have all the water they need, some nearby Palestinian villages are unable to receive more than a trickle. A large reason for this goes back to the 1995 Oslo Accords, which legalized Israel’s water dominance over Palestinians. This power dynamic (that is, a dynamic in which Israel has all the power, and the Palestinians have none) can be traced to the creation of the so-called Joint Water Committee (JWC). Under the Accords, Israel was to have 80% of the water in the aquifer located mostly on Palestinian land, and Palestinians 20%; Israel retained veto power over all Palestinian proposals. This arrangement, which was supposed to last for 5 years, is still in place – although the situation on the ground has changed drastically. [NOTE: Read more about the Oslo Accords here.]The Palestinian population has grown by 75% since 1995, but the amount of water Palestinians are allowed to extract from aquifers on their own land has remained static.The JWC does not function as a “joint” water resource governance institution because of fundamental asymmetries – of power, of capacity, of information, of interests – that prevent the development of a consensual approach to resolving water management conflicts.″
An observer…called ″the interaction between the two sides during the [JWC] meetings … an exercise in subjugation and humiliation.″Water scarcity for Palestinians is not a climate change issue – it is a human rights issue, and it has been for a long time. One eloquent Palestinian advocate describes it this way:Water scarcity in Palestine is not simply a physical phenomenon, but a crisis manufactured by the Israeli state to control Palestinian society and industry.Assault on the natural environment has long been a tool employed by Israel in its ethnic cleansing, as reasserted by recently released historical documents which outline Israel’s reliance on the destruction of land and crops to drive Palestinians out of their homes.
The Associated Press quoted one expert recently as saying, “The main motivation for Israeli actions are not so much about water anymore but about politics” – a political and humanitarian travesty in which only non-Jews are dying of thirst.Kathryn Shihadah is an editor and staff writer for If Americans Knew. She also blogs occasionally at Palestine Home.
FURTHER READING ON ISRAEL’S WEAPONIZATION OF WATER:Israel says “No” to clean running water for Palestinian villagesHeart-wrenching firsthand account of Israeli water criminalityIsrael’s ongoing “Water War” against PalestiniansIsraeli Settlement Pollutes Palestinian Olive Groves With Sewage WaterIsrael’s history of biological warfare & poisoning – violations of int’l law1951 Documents Reveal Israel’s Intent to Ethnically Cleanse Bedouin from their Lands
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