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LIFE IS HARD UNDER ISRAELI
OCCUPATION
Photo slideshow from the
Palestinians Occupied Territories

Life is hard for
Palestinians living under Israeli occupation in the West Bank.
Restrictions on movement and violence from settlers often make it
difficult to earn a living or obtain essential services.
1)

Illegal Israeli
settlements have been built throughout the occupied West Bank, making
life for Palestinians who live close by very difficult. Some Palestinian
families, like this one in the Hebron region, try to get by without any
modern-day conveniences, while the settlement in the background has
everything it needs readily available.
2)

Manal (Um Geith)
prepares a meal for her children on the fireplace. She lives in an area
which is under full Israeli civil and military control near the city of
Jenin. Palestinian families have neither mains electricity nor running
water. A settlement a few hundred metres away has both. The house is
falling apart and the roof leaks when it rains, but the family cannot
just carry out the urgently needed repairs. That requires permission
from the Israeli authorities – something the family has given up on ever
getting.
3)

The old city
centre of Hebron, which used to be a bustling market place, is a mere
shadow of its former self. Settlers routinely throw all sorts of objects
down on Palestinian shoppers and shopkeepers from their apartments above
the market street. Shopkeepers have tried to protect themselves with
mesh – but there is still no protection against filthy water or urine.
As a result, many shoppers stay away.
4)

Izzat Othman
Nassar (74) owns a number of fields and olive groves in Awarta Valley
outside Nablus. Most of these fields have been out of bounds for him for
a number of years because of violence by settlers. It has simply been
too dangerous to get near the land. An ICRC project has helped a number
of farmers in the valley regain access to some of their fields. ICRC
teams have been present when the farmers ventured into the valley, which
helped them feel safer. But it is still too dangerous for him to go to
his olive groves closest to the settlement.
5)

For shepherds who
live close to where settlements have sprung up, it can be almost
impossible to lead a normal life. This boy from the Yanoun area close to
Nablus might not be able to follow in his father's footsteps and become
a shepherd. The family has already sold part of its flock. Harassment by
settlers is a regular feature of life and the family is considering
selling the rest of the flock and moving away because they no longer
feel safe in the area.
6)

The routing of the
West Bank barrier has created a range of problems that seriously affect
everyday life in the West Bank. In many places, the barrier deviates
from the so-called "Green Line," the armistice line of 1949, and cuts
deep into the West Bank. Where it does so, it hampers normal movement
between Palestinian neighbourhoods and villages, it impedes trade and
contact between family members and friends and, in some cases, makes it
difficult to reach a hospital quickly.
7)

The village of
Azzun Atme has been cut off from the rest of the West Bank by the
barrier. As this checkpoint is closed at night, most pregnant women from
the village leave several days or weeks before their due date in order
to make sure that they can get to a hospital in time when they go into
labour.
8)

Life in the West
Bank has improved somewhat for Palestinians in the larger urban areas as
some checkpoints have been removed or checks by Israeli soldiers have
become more sporadic. As a consequence, trade and the economy have grown
in some areas. Nevertheless, everyday life for a great many other
Palestinians remains very difficult
http://www.icrc.org/web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/htmlall/israel-photos-160210
http://www.terrasantalibera.org/fotopalestina_occupatafebb2010.htm
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