Israel destroys Palestinian Solar project provided by Netherlands.
Reported
in WaPo but not NYT
Newsletter published on 15 July 2017
(1) Israel destroys Dutch development project;
Netherlands furious
(2) This Palestinian village had solar power — until
Israeli soldiers
took it away - WAPO
(3) Israel Confiscates Palestinian
Shepherds' Solar Units - Haaretz
(4) Palestinians prepare to lose the solar
panels that provide a
lifeline (2012)
(5) Israel to Demolish Palestinian
Solar Energy Program (2012)
(1) Israel destroys Dutch development
project; Netherlands furious
http://nltimes.nl/2017/06/30/israel-destroys-dutch-development-project-netherlands-furious
By
Janene Pieters on June 30, 2017 - 08:29
{photo} Empty structures that
used to hold solar panels - Israeli army
destroys a Dutch development
project in the Palestinian village Jubbet
adh Dhib on the west bank of the
Jordan, 28 Jun 2017. Photo: Comet-ME /
Facebook {end}
Israel
demolished a Dutch development project consisting of 96 solar
panels and
other equipment for supplying power to Palestinian village
Jubbet Adh Dhib
on the west bank of the Jordan. The Netherlands spent
about half a million
euros on the project last year. The Ministry of
Foreign Affairs is furious,
AD reports.
"We immediately protested seriously with the Israeli
authorities and
demanded return of the goods. We're currently investigating
the exact
damages and what next steps can be taken", Foreign Affairs
spokesperson
Chris Bakker said to the newspaper.
Israeli soldiers
raided the village on Wednesday morning. "The Israeli
soldiers also tried to
drag the batteries away, but they were apparently
too heavy. They were
damaged, however", said Tamar Cohen, organizational
development manager at
Comet-me, the organization with whom the
Netherlands donated the solar
panels. Israel regularly evacuates
Palestinian settlements because of the
lack of property acts or building
permits. "But that always goes through the
court first and then we can
litigate. This is the first time soldiers seized
goods unannounced",
Cohen said to the newspaper.
COGAT, the Israeli
government on the west bank of the Jordan and the
Gaza strip, said that the
Dutch solar panels were illegal, in a
statement given to AD. "The necessary
permits were lacking. A ban on
building solar panels in the village has now
been imposed. We emphasize
that the village has other power
sources."
The Netherlands donates tens of millions of euros to projects
for
Palestinians on the west bank of the Jordan and in the Gaza strip every
year. Aid agencies often don't request building permits from the Israeli
military government, because of long waiting times and very low chance
of success. In practice this basically means that the projects are
dependent on Israeli goodwill.
This is not the first time Israel
destroyed a Netherlands funded
project. In 2015 Israeli troops seized Dutch
funded agricultural
machinery for Palestinian farmers in the village of
Kusra. The
Netherlands also paid the fines to get the machinery back,
because the
farmers themselves couldn't. And in 2000 Israeli tanks bombed a
port
under construction in the Gaza strip. The Netherlands contributed 23
million euros to that port.
The international community considers
Israel's occupation of the
Jordan's west bank to be illegal and strives for
an independent
Palestinian state in parts of the area. But the peace process
between
Israel and Palestine has been deadlocked for years.
(2) This
Palestinian village had solar power — until Israeli soldiers
took it away -
WAPO
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/this-palestinian-village-had-solar-power--until-israeli-soldiers-took-it-away/2017/07/05/d4b8a5fc-6036-11e7-a4f7-af34fc1d9d39_story.html
This
Palestinian village had solar power — until Israeli soldiers took
it
away
By Anne-Marie O'Connor
July 7
JUBBET ADH DHIB, West
Bank — The residents of this dirt-poor Palestinian
village waited decades
for electricity. But in November, a Dutch-funded
solar project finally gave
them round-the-clock power to refrigerate
food or do a load of
laundry.
That ended last week when Israeli military administrators in the
West
Bank sent soldiers with assault rifles and a team of workers to shut
down the $400,000 project, ripping out its electrical components and
driving away with 96 solar panels, some of them broken, villagers
said.
Israeli officials called the construction illegal, but the builders
contested the charge, saying they are providing desperately needed
humanitarian aid that is required under international law.
"It was a
disaster. We are all in mourning," said Fadia al-Wahsh, head
of the local
women’s committee, hours after the soldiers left, as
villagers discussed how
to save food and medicine from the stifling
summer heat.
The
confiscation was the latest round of a widening conflict between
European
donors and the Israeli government over projects that benefit
Palestinians in
Area C, about 60 percent of the West Bank under full
Israeli
control.
"The Netherlands immediately protested to the Israeli
authorities and
demanded the return of the confiscated goods," said Dirk-Jan
Vermeij, a
spokesman for Foreign Minister Bert Koenders, who he said told
Dutch
parliament Tuesday that "this confiscation is simply unacceptable." He
said Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte had discussed the issue with Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman
Emmanuel Nahshon declined to comment
in a text exchange but referred
questions to Israel’s military
Coordination of Government Activities in the
Territories, known as
COGAT. A spokesman for COGAT said in an email that the
solar and
electric panels were installed without the necessary
permits.
COGAT said the parties involved could "file a request for
releasing the
equipment as long as the organization will promise that the
illegal
construction will not be established without the necessary permits
again."
[20 minutes from modern Jerusalem, a Palestinian village is
stranded in
the past]
The incident illustrates a Catch-22 in the West
Bank: For years, Israel
has denied most permit requests for Palestinian
construction in Area C.
But if Palestinians build homes or other structures
without permits,
Israeli authorities say the structures are subject to
demolition because
they lack permits.
The European Union said in a
recent report that there has been an
"exceptional upsurge" in seizures or
demolitions of European-funded
projects by the Israeli government, which
faces pressure from Israeli
settlers to shut them down.
The report
said Israeli forces have seized or demolished 117
European-funded
humanitarian projects for Palestinians from September
through February:
latrines, animal shelters, agricultural projects and
emergency shelters for
families displaced by Israeli home demolitions.
A Dutch-funded solar
energy system was installed in this impoverished
Palestinian village in
November. Its panels were seized last week by
Israeli authorities who called
it illegal construction, saying the
village did not have the necessary
permits. The village women's
committee has been trying to acquire
electricity for the village, which
first requested power three decades ago.
(Courtesy of Comet-ME/Courtesy
of Comet-ME)
"E.U. humanitarian
activities are carried out in full accordance with
international
humanitarian law," the E.U. said in a February statement,
calling on Israel
"to halt demolitions of Palestinian houses and
property in accordance with
its obligation as an occupying power under
international humanitarian
law."
Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations, Danny Danon, told Army
Radio
that he saw political motives behind E.U. construction, the Times of
Israel reported.
"Like thieves in the night, they are building
illegal buildings .?.?. to
create territorial contiguity for the
Palestinians," he was quoted as
saying. "They are creating facts on the
ground."
A May U.N. report said Israeli authorities reportedly rejected
permits
for 391 of the 428 requests for building in Palestinian communities
in
Area C in the first half of 2016, the most current figures
available.
Most of the permits approved were reportedly issued by Israeli
authorities to transfer Bedouin populations, the United Nations
said.
" ‘Lack of permits’ is the cynical pretext used by Israeli
authorities
to create the illusion that proper procedures exist," B’Tselem,
an
Israeli human rights group, said in a statement.
[A new Jewish
settlement begins to rise in the West Bank ]
A Israeli government
proposal to allow thousands of new housing units in
the Palestinian town of
Qalqilya recently drew outraged public
statements from Israeli settler
leaders — who call for Israel to annex
Area C — and was openly criticized by
several right-wing ministers in
the Netanyahu government.
Jubbet adh
Dhib, a village of 170 people, has requested a hookup to the
electrical grid
numerous times since 1988, according to Human Rights
Watch. European-funded
solar streetlights were dismantled in 2009 at the
request of Israeli
authorities, European diplomats say.
A few hundred yards from it is the
Jewish settlement of Sde Bar, founded
in 1998, according to the
nongovernmental Settlement Watch. Residents
say they received Israeli
utilities and protection for years before Sde
Bar was legalized
retroactively in 2005.
Michael Sfard, the legal counsel for Comet-ME, the
Israeli-Palestinian
nonprofit that installed the solar electricity system,
said he would
fight the decision to shut it down and would appeal to
Israel’s highest
court, if necessary, on the grounds that Israel was
violating
international law by damaging humanitarian aid without providing
an
alternative.
"This has nothing to do with law enforcement," Sfard
said. "We have two
neighboring communities in the West Bank, one with all
the privileges,
and another that has nothing. It’s cruel."
COGAT said
Jubbet adh Dhib has an electricity alternative, an apparent
reference to a
generator that consumes $100 a day in diesel fuel —
villagers say they can
afford to run it only a few hours a day.
"I explained to them that we had
medicine in the refrigerator, insulin
for diabetics," said Amna al-Wahsh, a
member of the women’s committee.
"They said, ‘Move away; let us do our job.’
"
Anat Ben Nun, external relations director of Peace Now, said
demolitions
of Palestinian homes reached record levels in 2016, while
unauthorized
Israeli outposts with roads, water and electricity, "all built
completely illegally — are being retroactively legalized."
The solar
project in Jubbet adh Dhib was touted as an inspirational
success for the
women’s committee, which is trained to cope with medical
emergencies, such
as delivering babies.
At a March International Women’s Day event in
Ramallah, Amna al-Wahsh
described the transformation of her
village.
"We have refrigerators, washing machines," she said. "Our
children can
study whenever they like. I used to be afraid to let my
children go to
the bathroom with a candle, because they could burn down the
house."
"We are indescribably happy," she said, as the audience,
including
European and American donors, applauded.
(3) Israel
Confiscates Palestinian Shepherds' Solar Units - Haaretz
http://www.haaretz.com/middle-east-news/palestinians/.premium-1.799795
Israel
Confiscates Palestinian Shepherds' Home Solar Power Units
The units were
intended to operate refrigerators, used to store cheeses
– on which the
family's livelihood depends – and medicines for the sheep
and the
family
Jul 06, 2017 11:38 AM Amira Hass
Israel confiscated
Wednesday two home solar power units that had been
contributed by the
European Union to a small sheep-herding...
(4) Palestinians prepare to
lose the solar panels that provide a
lifeline (2012)
https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2012/mar/14/palestinians-prepare-to-lose-solar-panels
Palestinians
prepare to lose the solar panels that provide a lifeline
Israel is
planning to demolish 'illegal' solar panels that are the only
source of
electricity for Palestinians in West Bank villages
Phoebe Greenwood in
Tel Aviv
Wednesday 14 March 2012 18.00 AEDT
First published on
Wednesday 14 March 2012 18.00 AEDT
Two large solar panels jut out of the
barren landscape near Imneizil in
the Hebron hills. The hi-tech structures
sit incongruously alongside the
tents and rough stone buildings of the
Palestinian village, but they are
fundamental to life here: they provide
electricity.
Imneizil is not connected to the national electricity grid.
Nor are the
vast majority of Palestinian communities in Area C, the 62% of
the West
Bank controlled by Israel. The solar energy has replaced expensive
and
clunky oil-powered generators.
According to the Israeli
authorities, these solar panels – along with
six others in nearby villages –
are illegal and have been slated for
demolition.
Nihad Moor, 25, has
three small children. The family live in a two-room
tent kitted out with a
fridge, TV and very old computer. She also has a
small electric butter
churn, which she uses to supplement her husband's
small income from sheep
farming.
"The kids get sick all the time. At the moment, because of a
change in
the weather, they all have colds. Without electricity I wouldn't
even be
able to see to help them when they need to use the [outdoor] toilet
at
night," Moor says. "I don't want to imagine what life would be like here
if [the panels] were demolished."
Imneizil's solar system was built
in 2009 by the Spanish NGO Seba at a
cost of €30,000 to the Spanish
government. According to the Israeli
authorities, it was built without a
permit.
Guy Inbar, a spokesperson for the Israeli authorities in the West
Bank,
explains: "International aid is an important component in improving
and
promoting the quality of life of the Palestinian population but this
does not grant immunity for illegal or unco-ordinated activity."
The
problem for Palestinian communities here is that permission to build
any
infrastructure is very hard to come by. According to figures from
the civil
administration quoted by the pressure group Peace Now, 91
permits were
issued for Palestinian construction in Area C between 2001
and 2007. In the
same period, more than 10,000 Israeli settlement units
were built and1,663
Palestinian structures demolished.
The Jewish settlements in Area C are
connected to the national water and
electricity grids. But most Palestinian
villages are cut off from basic
infrastructure, including water and sewage
services. Imneizil, which
borders the ultra-religious settlement of Beit
Yatir, currently has nine
demolition orders on various structures, including
a toilet block and
water cistern for the school.
Comet ME is an
Israeli NGO trying to circumvent these crippling
restrictions on Palestinian
development by harnessing Hebron's abundant
natural energy sources – wind
and sun.
Funded largely by the German government, the organisation has
already
provided tens of Palestinian villages with electricity through solar
panels and wind turbines. Its goal is to reach all villages in the
southern Hebron area by the end of 2013.
"In technical terms it's
do-able, but it depends on Israeli policies,"
says Elad Orian, Comet ME's
founder. "Power is a human right, like
housing and education," he says. "We
deal with providing basic energy
services. Renewable energy provides the
best route to do it."
The green energy solution has its flaws. At a cost
of around $4,500 per
family, it is expensive. Nor does it generate enough
electricity to
sustain a community. But it has offered a lifeline to the
150,000
Palestinians living in Area C's impoverished
communities.
However, it will become increasingly difficult to convince
donors that
alternative energy is worth investing in if the expensive
technology
they are funding is destroyed. After the order issued against the
Imneizil solar panels in September, six alternative energy systems built
by Comet ME in Hebron have received demolition orders.
A legal fight
waged by Rabbis for Human Rights has succeeded in
suspending, but not
lifting, the demolition of Imneizil's panels. The
German foreign office has
launched an intense diplomatic effort to save
the others in nearby
villages.
One UN expert, speaking anonymously as they are not authorised
to talk
to the media, believes the crackdown on the alternative energy
movement
by the Israelis is part of a deliberate strategy in Area C. "From
December 2010 to April 2011, we saw a systematic targeting of the water
infrastructure in Hebron, Bethlehem and the Jordan valley," the source
said. "Now, in the last couple of months, they are targeting
electricity. Two villages in the area have had their electrical poles
demolished.
"There is this systematic effort by the civil
administration targeting
all Palestinian infrastructure in Hebron. They are
hoping that by making
it miserable enough, they [the Palestinians] will pick
up and leave."
According to UN research, that is happening. Ten out of 13
Palestinian
communities living in Area C surveyed by the Office for the
Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs in 2011 reported that families had
already left their land as a result of Israeli policies. Ali Mohamed
Hraizat, 49, head of Imneizil's village council, fears that if the solar
panels are destroyed, his community will see an exodus.
"We've been
here since 1948. We try to stay and maintain our lives, but
people will
leave if the electricity is cut off," he says. "They are
used for light for
their children to study by and for televisions. They
will move into town.
The solar panel isn't doing any harm … I just don't
see the point in
demolishing it."
(5) Israel to Demolish Palestinian Solar Energy Program
(2012)
https://www.commondreams.org/headline/2012/02/16-4
https://www.revleft.space/vb/threads/168014-Israel-To-Demolish-Palestinian-Solar-Energy-Program
Israel
To Demolish Palestinian Solar Energy Program
Thursday, February 16,
2012
by Common Dreams staff
A sustainable energy program in 'Area
C' of rural West Bank is being
threatened by Israeli authorities. The
program, which recently installed
solar panels and wind turbines in 16
communities, is providing 1,500
Palestinians with electricity -- who were
formerly without reliable
energy.(Photo: AFP/Menahem Kahana)
The
foreign aid program, thus far successful, has become a new target
for Israel
as it threatens to demolish the structures that supposedly
lie within
Israeli 'administration'.
* * *
Der Spiegel reports:
The best part is when the lights in the tents go on, one by one,
says Elad
Orian. Electricity here, in the hills south of Hebron, was
long unreliable.
Either it was not available or it was too expensive,
produced for just a few
hours each day by a noisy, diesel-guzzling
generator. That changed when Elad
Orian and Noam Dotan, two Israeli
physicians who had tired of conflict, came
along three years ago and
installed solar panels and erected wind turbines.
Since then, such
facilities have been installed in 16 communities, providing
1,500
Palestinians with electricity. [...]
The success, though,
could soon be a thing of the past. Israel has
threatened to tear them down
with five municipalities in recent weeks
having received "stop work" orders
-- the first step on the road to
demolition. The problem is that the
facilities are in the so-called Area
C, which covers 60 percent of the West
Bank and is administered by
Israel. Permission from the Israelis is a
requirement before
construction projects can move ahead -- and permits are
almost never
given to Palestinians. [...]
European diplomats in
Ramallah and Tel Aviv suspect that the
demolition orders are a reaction to a
recently drafted, unusually
critical EU report on the situation in Area C.
It states: "The window
for a two-state solution is closing rapidly with the
continued expansion
of Israeli settlements." The conclusion: The EU needs to
target
investment in economic development and improved living conditions of
Palestinians in Area C. [...]
"What can you do if there are
impediments to development, such as an
undefined de-development policy?"
says Tsafrir Cohen, Middle East
coordinator of Medico International, which
supported two of the systems.
A few months ago, a similar project
co-financed by the Spanish
government was scheduled for demolition,
something which has been
prevented thus far through massive diplomatic
pressure.
Projects funded by foreign aid organizations or the EU
have often
been destroyed in the past, the best known example being the Gaza
airport, financed with $38 million from the EU only to be destroyed by
Israeli bombs a short time after its construction. Generally, though,
the demolitions have been the result of security concerns. The fact that
harmless solar cells -- installations which are funded by allied
countries to provide basic humanitarian needs -- are at risk of
demolition is a new development. [...]
Hundreds of people live
in the village, and they are the poorest of
the poor. A community of
shepherds, they moved freely through the area
until Israel occupied the West
Bank in 1967. Since then, they have
settled, collecting rain water during
the winter and buying expensive
drinking water brought in by a truck along a
gravel track in the summer.
A well-maintained road to the settlement doesn't
exist, despite the fact
that Shaab al-Buttum lies between two Israeli
outposts. The settlements
are illegal, but miraculously they have all the
basics their Palestinian
neighbors are missing: electricity, water and
roads.
* * *
Ma'an News reports:
In recent months, the
army issued demolition warnings against six
solar and wind power systems in
the South Hebron Hills, which were
funded by European governments and
development groups.
"What can you do if there are impediments to
development, such as
an undefined de-development policy?" says Tsafrir
Cohen, Middle East
coordinator of Medico International, which supported two
of the systems.
Known locally as Masafer Yatta, the communities lie
almost entirely
in Area C, the 62 percent of the West Bank under full Israel
civil and
security control since the 1993 Oslo Accords. [...]
Cohen says if Medico International abandons development work in
Area C,
moving to Palestinian Authority-controlled areas where permits
are not a
problem, they would do little more than "painting the walls of
Bantustans."
"We cannot just facilitate a nice jail cell, and a
system where
people don’t have rights." [...]
Threats to
demolish vital village resources are intended to
"silently move us from the
land," village council head Ali Muhammad Ali
Heirezat says. "We have been
here since 1948, and we don’t have another
place to go."
* *
*
Several West Bank villages had been without electricity for years. Not
long ago, however, international funding and an Israeli foundation made
it possible to erect solar panels and wind turbines. In total, 16
communities with 1,500 residents have benefited. Here, a woman in the
West Bank village of Susya.
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