Israel Destroys Entire Village

What is affected
Housing private
Communal
InfrastructureWater
InfrastructureWater
Energy
Type of violation Forced eviction
Demolition/destruction
Dispossession/confiscation
Date 19 July 2010
Region MENA [ Middle East/North Africa ]
Country Palestine
Location al-Farsiyya & Fasayil

Affected persons

Total 168
Men 0
Women 0
Children 89
Indigenous
Proposed solution
Details al-Farsiyya 08_2010.pdf

Development



Forced eviction
Costs
Demolition/destruction
Land losses

- Land area (square meters)

- Total value
Housing losses
- Number of homes 83
- Total value €

Duty holder(s) /responsible party(ies)

State
TNC
Agrexco
Brief narrative

In two waves of demolitions, on 19 July and 5 August, the Civil Administration demolished all the structures in al-Farsiya, a Bedouin village in the northern Jordan Valley, east of which the Shadmot Mehula settlement was built. On 19 July, 70 temporary structures were demolished, of which 26 were shacks in which at least 107 persons, among them 52 children, lived. The rest of the structures were used as kitchens, lavatories, and for farming, including a packing house built 30 years ago in partnership with the Israeli agricultural export firm Agrexco. On 5 August, the Civil Administration demolished 10 structures, in addition to 27 tents that the International Red Cross and the Palestinian Authority had provided to residents who had lost their homes in the first wave of demolitions. In the second wave, 22 persons were left homeless, 11 of them children. During the same period, the Civil Administration also demolished a residential structure in Fasayil, in the central area of the Jordan Valley, leaving nine persons (including six children and one infant) homeless. The Administration also demolished two residential structures and two sheep enclosures in Khirbet ‘Ein al-Hilweh, next to which the Maskiyot settlement was built, leaving 20 persons, including nine children, homeless. The Administration also confiscated water pumps from the village of Khirbet Samra, in the northern Jordan Valley. These pumps supplied water from collection pools to crops in the village.

Costs €   0


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