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- Written by Donald Macintyre Donald Macintyre
- Published: 17 January 2012 17 January 2012
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EU on verge of abandoning hope for a viable Palestinian state
Israel's foreign ministry denied that Israeli settlers were taking water resources from the West Bank
Donald Macintyre
Jerusalem - Thursday 12 January 2012 - Independent (UK)
The Palestinian presence in the largest part of the occupied West Bank - has
been, "continuously undermined" by Israel in ways that are "closing the
window" on a two-state solution, according to an internal EU report seen by
The Independent.
The report, approved by top Brussels officials, argues that EU support,
including for a wide range of building projects, is now needed to protect
the rights of "ever more isolated" Palestinians in "Area C", a sector that
includes all 124 Jewish settlements - illegal in international law - and
which is under direct Israeli control. It comprises 62 per cent of the West
Bank, including the "most fertile and resource rich land".
With the number of Jewish settlers now at more than double the shrinking
Palestinian population in the largely rural area, the report warns bluntly
that, "if current trends are not stopped and reversed, the establishment of
a viable Palestinian state within pre-1967 borders seem more remote than
ever".
The 16-page document is the EU's starkest critique yet of how a combination
of house and farm building demolitions; a prohibitive planning regime;
relentless settlement expansion; the military's separation barrier;
obstacles to free movement; and denial of access to vital natural resources,
including land and water, is eroding Palestinian tenure of the large tract
of the West Bank on which hopes of a contiguous Palestinian state depend.
International brokers are trying to persuade both sides to reach a peaceful
settlement through talks, which had stalled over the building of Israeli
settlements and the Palestinians' recent declaration of statehood at the UN.
The report points out how dramatically the settler population - now at
310,000 - of Area C has increased at the expense of Palestinian numbers -
estimated at around 150,000. In 1967, there were between 200,000 and 320,000
Palestinians in just the agriculture-rich Jordan Valley part of the zone.
Area C is one of three zones allocated by the 1993 Oslo agreement. Area A
includes major Palestinian cities, and is under the control of the
Palestinian Authority. Area B is under shared Israeli-Palestinian control.
Although Area C is the least populous, the report says "the window for a
two-state solution is rapidly closing with the continued expansion of
Israeli settlements and access restrictions for Palestinians in Area C
[which] compromises crucial natural resources and land for the future
demographic and economic growth of a viable Palestinian state".
It says the EU needs "at a political" level to persuade Israel to
redesignate Area C, but in the meantime it should "support Palestinian
presence in, and development of the area". The report says the destruction
of homes, public buildings and workplaces result in "forced transfer of the
native population" and that construction is effectively prohibited in 70 per
cent of the land - and then in zones largely allocated to settlements of the
Israeli military.
In practice, it says Palestinian construction is permitted in just 1 per
cent of Area C, "most of which is already built up". The EU report's short-
and medium-term recommendations include calling on Israel to halt
demolitions of houses and structures built without permits - of which there
have been 4,800 since 2000. But there is also a call for the EU to support a
building programme that includes schools, clinics, water and other
infrastructure projects.
The EU should also be more vocal in raising objections to "involuntary
population movements, displacements, evictions and internal migration".
The report says Area C - along with East Jerusalem - has not benefited from
the gradual reversal of the West Bank economic collapse since the beginning
of the intifada in 2000 which saw growth of 9 per cent in 2010. It also
claims Palestinian economic activity is mainly "low intensity" agriculture
in contrast to specialised, export-directed farming by Jewish settlers in
the Jordan Valley "which uses most of the water resources in the area", and
that it is of "great concern" that cisterns and rainwater structures have
been destroyed by the Israeli authorities since January 2010 - a claim which
Israel's foreign ministry denied.