A Noose Around the Necks of Palestinians
Coordinator of the Campaign to Stop the WallFebruary 21, 2004

The Israeli wall in the Occupied West Bank is almost one-third complete, a year and a half after construction began. It snakes deep inside the West Bank, devouring fertile land into de facto Israeli-controlled areas, encircling residential areas and ghettoizing the Palestinian population.

That the wall is a violation of international law is not new. Countless reports have been issued by Palestinian and international sources discussing why the wall is illegal and documenting the resulting daily violations of individual and collective rights. The United Nations has stated clearly that the wall is illegal and should be stopped and dismantled.

But no report is needed to highlight the atrocity taking place in the occupied territories. The 90,000 people who already are directly affected by the wall's 90-mile ''first phase'' are well aware that their lives have been shattered. Their incomes, dignity, children's future and heritage were uprooted in a matter of weeks as bulldozers leveled their lands to confiscate and isolate them.

The current focal point in lobbying around the wall's illegality is the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague, and its upcoming advisory opinion on the wall. It is certainly a significant event, placing international attention on what is taking place in Palestine and highlighting the wall's significance for the fate of Palestine. The U.N. vote to take Israel to court shows that an overwhelming majority of the world is against the wall.

But the fact that the court's decision is nonbinding should be the central issue in discussions around the ICJ hearing. Though Palestinian movements and organizations are seeking ways to translate the decision into an tool that will bring an end to the wall, the shortcomings of the international system are a reminder to Palestinians of all that continues to fail them in their quest for justice.

What seems more overpowering is the present international campaign, spearheaded by Israel and marked by a public-relations barrage and concrete actions, to ensure that the wall continues unhindered. The tactics are overwhelming, cynical and tragic: pressure during the U.N. vote, questioning the jurisdiction of the court, trying to expel an ICJ judge and rallying the United States and European Union to demand the court not hear the case.

And Israel has taken another simultaneous step, announcing its latest plans to ''shift'' the wall's path, as if Israel just discovered that the wall is negatively affecting Palestinians. Any changes will be cosmetic. They will not make it any less illegal or less devastating to Palestinians. The ways in which Israel will continue building even as it packages it to the media so they can swallow it more easily, should be detested by all.

Israeli control

The wall is a noose around the necks of tens of thousands, soon to be hundreds of thousands. Palestinians see it clearly as the final stage in sealing their fate into lifeless reservations. As the barrier slices the West Bank, it facilitates Israeli control of some 50 percent of the occupied area and has already brought about the expulsion of nearly 15 percent of the population of Qalqiliya, the first city targeted by the wall. Here lies the fate of countless other communities if it remains.

In the end, a court decision that makes clear the wall's illegality can, it's hoped, spark greater international outrage that can translate into real pressure on Israel. But there is legitimate concern that nonbinding court's decision will face global apathy or will be rendered irrelevant by Israel's continued public-relations and media game.

One thing is clear in Palestine, as the bulldozers devastate our lands and lives: Israel has no intention of stopping construction. Israel has declared that it will be completed just one year from now. It goes without saying that time is running out.

Jamal Jumá is coordinator of the Palestinian Environmental NGOs Network.

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