Israel pushing large tree planting in Naqab to disclaim lands to Bedouin

Israel is pushing through a plan to plant trees across a significant swath of the Negev in a bid to deny Bedouin residents from accessing the lands.

The plan is described as “agricultural planting” but local activists and human rights organizations say it is being implemented to weaken the Bedouin’s connection to the lands, a significant amount of which are the subject of ownership lawsuits and some of which are used for agriculture. The Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel (SPNI) states that this move also has destructive repercussions for the desert environment and is being taken while sidestepping planning procedures.

The planting, which the Jewish National Fund (Keren Kayemeth LeIsrael) is in charge of, is planned across 40,000 dunams (10,000 acres) and focuses on areas around the Bedouin communities of Segev Shalom and Abu Talul.

The interministerial coordination committee responsible for approving the plan debated it on Monday. Israel Skop of the Israel Land Authority heads the committee, which was established five years ago, in wake of SPNI’s petition to the High Court of Justice against the ILA’s planting policy on the grounds that it violated planning procedures.

The state agreed in response to establish the coordination committee to approve so-called agricultural plantings.

Planting has occurred periodically since then. Work was done recently adjacent to the unrecognized Bedouin village of Hirbat Al-Watan, east of Tel Sheva, where 4,500 people live. The village is in the process of planning and gaining official recognition. So far, the committee decided to start planting only in parts of the lands.

In this case, residents turned to Economy and Industry Minister Amir Peretz, responsible for the Authority for Development and Settlement of the Bedouin. He acted to stop the works. However, the ILA is permitted to continue such works even without coordination with the Bedouin development authority. In response, far-right lawmaker Bezalel Smotrich complained to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that “a Zionist deed of unmatched importance” was being stopped.

“One day tractors and other equipment showed up and started digging ditches right next to residents’ homes,” Majd al-Shenarna, chairman of the village council. “It was frightening because there were rumors that they wanted to move us elsewhere. All this happened on plots that village residents have owned for generations. There was no signage or explanation what they were doing. We asked a human rights group to help us, and we set up a protest tent.”

The works were halted, but resumed last week before being stopped again a few days ago.

“This time, they told us they were planning to work on the plots which have no ownership claims,” al-Shenara said. “However, we explained to them that this area is also important to the village’s future because we will need it for public buildings.”

Al-Shenara says he hopes the state will hold a dialogue with the village council to prevent confrontations and to allow the continued establishment of the village’s legal planning status.

Issam Al-Atiya, a resident of Abu Talul who also heads the council of unrecognized villages, said he could not see how the state would want to plant trees without coordinating with local villagers who have land claims.

“We will object and won’t allow them to take the lands just like that,” he said. “It seems the state feels it can do what it wants with Bedouin. They don’t see us as people. We will inform all the local families and recruit them to stop this.”

Damaging Desert Ecology

Ahead of Monday’s meeting today, SPNI asked Skop to halt the process. SPNI says the move violates what was agreed to in court. “The coordination committee was meant to arrange plantings of a limited scope, in specific and urgent cases in which there was a proven threat of a specific invasive danger to land,” the NGO wrote. “Data on the areas being sought out for planting show there aren’t any construction violations in the overwhelming majority of lands.”

SPNI asserts that such an extent of planting requires coordination with the district building and planning committee. The main reason for this is the far-reaching impact that forestation has on the desert ecological system. Most of the land in question is made up of loess soil, housing many unique plant and animal species. Much of the land has already been damaged because of development activities and working the land. The NGO claims that implementing the planting plan will require introducing heavy equipment to the land, excavating and planting trees that will significantly change the desert scenery. It predicts that species characteristic of loess areas will be replaced by other animals suited to trees planted by humans.

“The ILA’s planting of trees in widespread areas across the Negev is another way of the state abusing the lives of Bedouin residents,” said Cesar Yeudkin, planner of Arab localities for planning rights NGO Bimkom. “Instead of talking with the local leadership to advance together solutions for organizing settlement and developing employment resources for the community, the state exploits its power to reduce its living space and deny it basic agricultural income that harms no one. Let’s hope that those responsible will wake up and realize that it’s preferable to act in other ways.”

The ILA commented: “The Israel Land Authority works to conserve state lands, partly through planting. It is a successful step that has proven its efficacy in recent years and is done according to the law and pursuant to the rules. The authority works to conserve open spaces and nature from illegal control and invests tens of millions of shekels in these lands through the Fund for the Protection of Open Spaces. Let it be stressed that the High Court rejected the position of the Society for Protection of Nature. The committee operates precisely according to the court decision and discusses all comments and opinions of the partner ministries.”

Original article

Photo: A protest tent set up at the entrance to the Bedouin town of Shaqib al-Salam, Naqab, 27 July 2011. Source: Eliyahu Hershkovitz.

Related articles:

Israel/Palestine: Protesting Naqab Land Grab

COVID-19, Right to Health and Israeli ApartheidCOVID-19, Right to Health and Israeli Apartheid

Israel: UN Rights Body Finds Apartheid

Palestine/Israel: Fake Justices

Naqab “Largest Land Grab since 1948”‌

Palestine/Israel: Demolishing Naqab Bedouin

Land Day: 17 Fallen in 2018, as the 6 in 1976

Themes
• Access to natural resources
• Accompanying social processes
• Advocacy
• Armed / ethnic conflict
• Climate change
• Demographic manipulation
• Destruction of habitat
• Disaster mitigation
• Discrimination
• Displaced
• Displacement
• Dispossession
• Environment (Sustainable)
• Epidemics, diseases
• ESC rights
• Farmers/Peasants
• Forced evictions
• Health
• Historic heritage sites
• Homeless
• Human rights
• Indigenous peoples
• International
• Land rights
• Landless
• Local
• Local Governance
• Megaprojects
• National
• Pastoralists
• People under occupation
• Population transfers
• Project management
• Property rights
• Public policies
• Public programs and budgets
• Regional
• Research
• Rural planning
• Security of tenure
• Squatters
• Subsidies
• Urban planning