Is the confrontation revealing of the soldier's humanity? That is not
the way it looks -- or feels -- to the young Palestinians penned in
behind the concrete barriers. They can only watch the scene in silence.
None would dare to address the soldier in the manner the old man did --
or take his side had the Israeli been of a different disposition. An
old man is unlikely to be detained or beaten at a checkpoint. Who,
after all, would believe he attacked or threatened a soldier, or
resisted arrest, or was carrying a weapon? But the young men know their
own injuries or arrests would barely merit a line in Israels
newspapers, let alone an investigation.
And so, the checkpoints have made potential warriors of Palestine's
grandfathers at the price of emasculating their sons and grandsons.
I observed this small indignity -- such humiliations are now a staple
of life for any Palestinian who needs to move around the West Bank --
during a shift with Machsom Watch. The grassroots organisation founded
by Israeli women in 2001 monitors the behaviour of soldiers at a few
dozen of the more accessible checkpoints (machsom in Hebrew).
The checkpoints came to dominate Palestinian life in the West Bank
(and, before the disengagement, in Gaza too) long before the outbreak
of the second intifada in late 2000, and even before the first
Palestinian suicide bombings. They were Israel's response to the Oslo
accords, which created a Palestinian Authority to govern limited areas
of the occupied territories. Israel began restricting Palestinians
allowed to work in Israel to those issued with exit permits; a system
enforced through a growing network of military roadblocks. Soon the
checkpoints were also restricting movement inside the occupied
territories, ostensibly to protect the Jewish settlements built in
occupied territory.
By late last year, according to the United Nations Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, 528 checkpoints and roadblocks
were recorded in the West Bank, choking its roads every few miles.
Israel's daily Haaretz newspaper puts the figure even higher: in
January there were 75 permanently manned checkpoints, some 150 mobile
checkpoints, and more than 400 places where roads have been blocked by
obstacles. All these restrictions on movement for a place that is,
according to the CIA's World Factbook, no larger than the small US
state of Colorado.
[an error occurred while processing this directive]At the checkpoints,
food spoils, patients die, and children are prevented from reaching
their schools[an error occurred while processing this directive]
As a result, moving goods and people from one place to the next in the
West Bank has become a nightmare of logistics and costly delays. At the
checkpoints, food spoils, patients die, and children are prevented from
reaching their schools. The World Bank blames the checkpoints and
roadblocks for strangling the Palestinian economy.
Embarrassed by recent publicity about the burgeoning number of
checkpoints, the Israeli prime minister, Ehud Olmert, promised the
Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, in December that there would be
an easing of travel restrictions in the West Bank -- to little effect,
according to reports in the Israeli media. Although the army announced
last month that 44 earth barriers had been removed in fulfilment of
Olmerts pledge, it later emerged that none of the roadblocks had
actually been there in the first place.
Contrary to the impression of most observers, the great majority of the
checkpoints are not even near the Green Line, Israels internationally
recognised border until it occupied the West Bank and Gaza in 1967.
Some are so deep inside Palestinian territory that the army refuses to
allow Machsom Watch to visit them. There, the women say, no one knows
what abuses are being perpetrated unseen on Palestinians.
But at Huwara checkpoint, where the old man refused to submit, the
soldiers know that most of the time they are being watched by fellow
Israelis and that their behaviour is being recorded in monthly logs.
Machsom Watch has a history of publishing embarrassing photographs and
videos of the soldiers' actions. It showed, for example, a videotape in
2004 of a young Palestinian man being forced to play his violin at Beit
Iba checkpoint, a story that gained worldwide attention because it
echoed the indignities suffered by Jews at the hands of the Nazis.
Machsom Watch has about 500 members, reportedly including Olmert's
leftwing daughter, Dana. But only about 200 actively take part in
checkpoint duties, an experience that has left many outspoken in
denouncing the occupation. The organisation is widely seen by the
Israeli public as extremist, with pro-Israel groups accusing the women
of "demonising" Israel.
It is the kind of criticism painfully familiar to Nomi Lalo, from Kfar
Sava. A veteran of Machsom Watch, she is the mother of three children,
two of whom have already served in the army while the youngest, aged
17, is due to join up later this year. "He has been more exposed to my
experiences in Machsom Watch and has some sympathy with my point of
view," she says. "But my oldest son has been very hostile about my
activities. It has caused a lot of tension in the family."
Most of the women do shifts at a single checkpoint, but I join Nomi on
"mobile" duty in the central region, moving between the dozens of
checkpoints west of Nablus.
She wants to start by showing me the separate road system in the West
Bank, with unrestricted and high-quality roads set aside for Jewish
settlers living illegally in occupied territory while Palestinians are
forced to make difficult and lengthy journeys over hills and through
valleys on what are often little more than dirt tracks.
Machsom Watch calls this "apartheid", a judgment shared by the liberal
daily Haaretz newspaper, which recently wrote an editorial that Israeli
parents ought to "be very worried about their country sending their
sons and daughters on an apartheid mission: to restrict Palestinian
mobility within the occupied territory in order to enable Jews to move
freely."
[an error occurred while processing this directive]A trip that should
take little more than a quarter of an hour is now all but impossible
for most Palestinians[an error occurred while processing this directive]
We leave the small Palestinian town of Azzoun, close by the city of
Qalqilya, and head directly north towards another city, Tulkarm. A trip
that should take little more than a quarter of an hour is now all but
impossible for most Palestinians.
"This road is virtually empty, even though it is the main route between
two of the West Banks largest cities," Nomi points out. "That is
because most Palestinians cannot get the permits they need to use these
roads. Without a permit they can't get through the checkpoints, so
either they stay in their villages or they have to seek circuitous and
dangerous routes off the main roads."
We soon reach one of the checkpoints Nomi is talking about. At Aras,
two soldiers sit in a small concrete bunker in the centre of the main
junction between Tulkarm and Nablus. The bored soldiers are killing
time waiting for the next car and the driver whose papers they will
need to inspect.
A young Palestinian man, in woollen cap to protect him from the cold,
stands by a telegraph post close by the junction. Bilal, aged 26, has
been "detained" at the same spot for three hours by the soldiers.
Nervously he tells us that he is trying to reach his ill father in
hospital in Tulkarm. Nomi looks unconvinced and, after a talk with the
soldiers and calls on her mobile phone to their commanders, she has a
clearer picture.
"He has been working illegally in Israel and they have caught him
trying to get back to his home in the West Bank. The soldiers are
holding him here to punish him. They could imprison him but, given the
dire state of the Palestinian economy, the Israeli prisons would soon
be overflowing with jobseekers. So holding him here all day is a way of
making him suffer. Its illegal but, unless someone from Machsom Watch
turns up, who will ever know?"
[an error occurred while processing this directive]"When they are being
helpful, I remind myself their primary motive is to protect the
occupations image"[an error occurred while processing this directive]
Is it not good that the military commanders are willing to talk to her?
"They know we can present their activities in the West Bank in a very
harsh light and so they cooperate. They dont want bad publicity. I
never forget that when I am speaking to them. When they are being
helpful, I remind myself their primary motive is to protect the
occupations image."
Nomi sees proof in cases like Bilal's that the checkpoints and Israel's
steel and concrete barrier in the West Bank -- or fence, as she calls
it -- are not working in the way Israel claims. "First, the fence is
built on Palestinian land, not on the Green Line, and it cuts
Palestinians off from their farmland and their chances of employment.
It forces them to try to get into Israel to work. It is self-defeating.
"And second, thousands of Palestinians like Bilal reach Israel from the
West Bank each day in search of work. Any one of them could be a
suicide bomber. The fence simply isn't effective in terms of stopping
them. If Palestinians who are determined enough to work in Israel can
avoid the checkpoints, those who want to attack Israel can certainly
avoid them. No one straps a bomb on and marches up to a checkpoint. It
is ordinary Palestinians who suffer instead."
The other day, says Nomi, she found a professor of English from Bir
Zeit University held at this checkpoint, just like Bilal. He had tried
to sneak out of Tulkarm during a curfew to teach a class at the
university near the city of Ramallah, some 40km south of here. Nomi's
intervention eventually got him released. "He was sent back to Tulkarm.
He thanked me profusely, but really what did we do for him or his
students? We certainly didn't get him to the university."
After Nomi's round of calls, Bilal is called over by one of the
soldiers. Wagging his finger reprovingly, the soldier lectures Bilal
for several minutes before sending him on his way with a dismissive
wave of the hand. Another small indignity.
As we leave, Nomi receives a call from a Machsom Watch group at Jitt
checkpoint, a few miles away. The team of women say that, when they
turned up to begin their shift, the soldiers punished the Palestinians
by shutting the checkpoint. The women are panicking because a tailback
of cars -- mainly taxis and trucks driven by Palestinians with special
permits -- is building. After some discussion with Nomi, it is decided
that the women should leave.
We head uphill to another checkpoint, some 500 metres from Aras,
guarding the entrance to Jabara, a village whose educated population
include many teachers and school inspectors. Today, however, the
villagers are among several thousand Palestinians living in a legal
twilight zone, trapped on the Israeli side of the wall. Cut off from
the rest of the West Bank, the villagers are not allowed to receive
guests and need special permits to reach the schools where they work.
(An additional quarter of a million Palestinians are sealed off from
both Israel and the West Bank in their own ghettoes.)
"Children who have married out of Jabara are not even allowed to visit
their parents here," says Nomi. "Family life has been torn apart, with
people unable to attend funerals and weddings. I cannot imagine what it
is like for them. The Supreme Court has demanded the fence be moved but
the state says it does not have the money for the time being to make
the changes."
[an error occurred while processing this directive]Jabara's children
have a checkpoint named after them which they have to pass through each
day to reach their schools nearby in the West Bank.[an error occurred
while processing this directive]
Jabara's children have a checkpoint named after them which they have to
pass through each day to reach their schools nearby in the West Bank.
At the far end of Jabara we have to pass through a locked gate to leave
the village. There we are greeted by yet another checkpoint, this one
closer to the Green Line on a road the settlers use to reach Israel. It
is one of a growing number that look suspiciously like border
crossings, even though they are not on the Green Line, with special
booths and lanes for the soldiers to inspect vehicles.
The soldiers see our yellow number plate, distinguishing us from the
green plates of the Palestinians, and wave us through. Nomi is using a
settlers' map she bought from a petrol station inside Israel to
navigate our way to the next checkpoint, Anabta, close by an isolated
settlement called Enav.
Although this was once a busy main road, the checkpoint is empty and
the soldiers mill around with nothing to do. An old Palestinian man
wearing the black and white keffiyah (head scarf) popularised by Yasser
Arafat approaches them selling socks. There are no detained
Palestinians, so we move on.
Nomi is as skeptical of claims she hears in the Israeli media about the
checkpoints foiling suicide attacks as she is about the army's claims
that they have been removing the roadblocks. "I spend all day
monitoring a checkpoint and come home in the evening, turn on the TV
and hear that four suicide bombers were caught at the checkpoint where
I have been working. It happens just too often. I stopped believing the
army a long time ago."
An Israeli soldier arrests a Palestinian Muslim worshipper while he was
going to pray in Jerusalem at Al-Aqsa mosque on the last Friday of the
holy month of Ramadan. Israeli soldiers try to prevent worshippers from
entering Jerusalem at the main checkpoint between Ramallah and
Jerusalem, 20 October 2006. (MaanImages/Fadi Arouri)
We arrive at another settlement, comprising a couple of dozen Jewish
families, called Shavei Shomron. It is located next to Road 60, once
the main route between Nablus and the most northernly Palestinian city,
Jenin. Today the road is empty as it leads nowhere; it has been blocked
by the army, supposedly to protect Shomron.
"Palestinians have to drive for hours across country to reach Jenin
just because a handful of settlers want to live here by the main road,"
observes Nomi.
A short distance away, also on Road 60, is one of the larger and busier
checkpoints: Beit Iba, the site where the Palestinian was forced to
play his violin. A few kilometres west of Nablus, the checkpoint has
been built in the most unlikely of places, a working quarry that has
covered the area in a fine white dust. "I look at this place and think
the army at least has a sense of humour," Nomi says.
Yellow Palestinian taxis are waiting at one end of the quarry to pick
up Palestinians allowed to leave Nablus on foot through the checkpoint.
At the vehicle inspection point, a donkey and cart stacked so high with
boxes of medicines that they look permanently on the verge of tipping
over is being checked alongside ambulances and trucks.
Close by is the familiar corridor of metal gates, turnstiles and
concrete barriers through which Palestinians must pass one at a time to
be inspected. On a battered table, a young man is emptying the contents
of his small suitcase, presumably after a stay in Nablus. He is made to
hold up his packed underwear in front of the soldiers and the
Palestinian onlookers. Another small indignity.
Here at least the Palestinians wait under a metal awning that protects
from the sun and rain. "The roof and the table are our doing," says
Nomi. "Before the Palestinians had to empty their bags on to the
ground."
Machsom Watch is also responsible for a small Portakabin office nearby,
up a narrow flight of concrete steps, with the ostentatious sign
"Humanitarian Post" by the door. "After we complained about women with
babies being made to wait for hours in line, the army put up this cabin
with baby changing facilities, diapers and formula milk. Then they
invited the media to come and film it."
The experiment was short-lived apparently. After two weeks the army
claimed the Palestinians were not using the post and removed the
facilities. I go up and take a look. It's entirely bare: just four
walls and a very dusty basin.
[an error occurred while processing this directive]How effective does
she feel Machsom Watch is? Does it really help the Palestinians or
merely add a veneer of legitimacy to the checkpoints by suggesting,
like the humanitarian post, that Israel cares about its occupied
subjects?[an error occurred while processing this directive]
How effective does she feel Machsom Watch is? Does it really help the
Palestinians or merely add a veneer of legitimacy to the checkpoints by
suggesting, like the humanitarian post, that Israel cares about its
occupied subjects? It is, Nomi admits, a question that troubles her a
great deal.
"It's a dilemma. The Palestinians here used to have to queue under the
sun without shelter or water. Now that we have got them a roof, maybe
we have made the occupation look a little more humane, a little more
acceptable. There are some women who argue we should only watch, and
not interfere, even if we see Palestinians being abused or beaten."
Which happens, as Machsom Watch's monthly reports document in detail.
Even the Israeli media is starting to report uncomfortably about the
soldier's behaviour, from assaults to soldiers urinating in front of
religious women.
At Beit Iba in October, says Nomi, a Palestinian youngster was badly
beaten by Israeli soldiers after he panicked in the queue and shinned
up a pole shouting that he couldn't breathe. Haaretz later reported
that the soldiers beat him with their rifle butts and smashed his
glasses. He was then thrown in a detention cell at the checkpoint.
And in November, Haitem Yassin, aged 25, made the mistake of arguing
with a soldier at a small checkpoint near Beit Iba called Asira
al-Shamalia. He was upset when the soldiers forced the religious women
he was sharing a taxi with to pat their bodies as a security measure.
According to Amira Hass, a veteran Israeli reporter, Yassin was then
shoved by one of the soldiers and pushed back. In the ensuing scuffle,
Yassin was shot in the stomach. He was then handcuffed and beaten with
rifle butts while other soldiers blocked an ambulance from coming to
his aid. Yassin remained unconscious for several days.
We leave Beit Iba and within a few minutes we are at another roadblock,
at Jitt. This is where the soldiers shut the checkpoint to traffic when
the Machsom Watch team showed up earlier. Nomi wants to talk to them.
We park some distance away, behind the queue of Palestinian cars, and
she walks towards them.
There is a brief discussion and she is back. Meanwhile, one of the
soldiers takes out a megaphone and calls to the taxi driver at the
front of the queue. He is told to leave his car at the wait sign and
approach the checkpoint 100 metres away on foot. "They are not happy.
Now they are punishing the drivers because I have turned up. Its
exactly the same response as this morning." Nomi decides Machsom Watch
should retreat again. We leave as the queue of cars starts to build up.
The notorious Huwara checkpoint, guarding the main road to Nablus from
the south, is our next destination. Early in the intifada, there were
regular stories of soldiers abusing Palestinians here. Today, Machsom
Watch has an almost permanent presence here, as do army officers
concerned about bad publicity.
It is a surreal scene. We are deep in the West Bank, with Palestinians
everywhere, but two young Jews -- sporting a hippy look fashionable
among the more extreme religious settlers -- are lounging by the side
of the road waiting for a lift to take them to one of the more militant
settlements that encircle Nablus. A soldier, there to protect them,
stands chatting.
"There used to be a taxi rank here waiting for Palestinians as they
came through the checkpoint," says Nomi, "but it has been moved much
further away so the settlers have a safer pickup point. The convenience
of the settlers means that each day thousands of Palestinians,
including pregnant women and the disabled, must walk more than an extra
hundred yards to reach the taxis."
They argue in Hebrew for a few minutes before he apologises, saying he
mistook me for a Palestinian[an error occurred while processing this
directive]
As I am photographing the checkpoint, a soldier wearing red-brown boots
-- the sign of a paratrooper, according to Nomi -- confronts me,
warning that he will confiscate my camera. Nomi knows her, and my,
rights and asks him by what authority he is making such a threat. They
argue in Hebrew for a few minutes before he apologises, saying he
mistook me for a Palestinian. "Are only Palestinians not allowed to
photograph the checkpoints?" Nomi scolds him, adding as an
afterthought: "Didn't you hear that modern mobile phones have cameras?
How can you stop a checkpoint being photographed?"
The pleasant face of Huwara is Micha, an officer from the District
Coordination Office who oversees the soldiers. When he shows up in his
car, Nomi engages him in conversation. Micha tells us that yesterday a
teenager was stopped at the checkpoint carrying a knife and bomb-making
equipment. Nomi scoffs, much to Micha's annoyance.
"Why is it always teenagers being stopped at the checkpoints?" she asks
him. "You know as well as I do that the Shin Bet [Israel's domestic
security service] puts these youngsters up to it to justify the
checkpoints' existence. Why would anyone leave Nablus with a knife and
bring it to Huwara checkpoint? For God's sake, you can buy swords on
the other side of the checkpoint, in Huwara village."
We leave Huwara and go deeper into the West Bank, along a "sterile
road" -- army parlance for one the Palestinians cannot use -- that
today services settlers reaching Elon Moreh and Itimar. Once
Palestinians travelled the road to the village of Beit Furik but not
anymore. "Israel does not put up signs telling you that two road
systems exist here. Instead it is the responsibility of Palestinians to
know that they cannot drive on this road. Any that make a mistake are
arrested."
Southeast of Nablus we pass the village of Beit Furik itself, the
entrance to which has a large metal gate that can be lock by the army
at will. A short distance on and we reach Beit Furik checkpoint and
beyond it, tantalisingly in view, the grey cinderblock homes of the
city of Nablus.
"They know that these checkpoints violate international law and that
they are complict in war crimes. Many of the soldiers are scared of
being photographed"[an error occurred while processing this directive]
Again, when I try to take a photo, a soldier storms towards me barely
concealing his anger. Nomi remonstrates with him, but he is in a foul
mood. Away from him, she confides: "They know that these checkpoints
violate international law and that they are complict in war crimes.
Many of the soldiers are scared of being photographed."
Faced with the hostile soldier, we soon abandon Beit Furik and head
back to Huwara. Less than a minute on from Huwara (Nomi makes me check
my watch), we have hit another checkpoint: Yitzhar. A snarl-up of
taxis, trucks and a few private cars is blocking the Palestinian
inspection lane. We overtake the queue in a separate lane reserved for
cars with yellow plates (settlers) and reach the other side of the
checkpoint.
There we find a taxi driver waiting by the side of the road next to his
yellow cab. Faek has been there for 90 minutes after an Israeli
policeman confiscated both his ID and his driving licence, and then
disappeared with them. Did Faek get the name of the policeman? No, he
replies. "Of course not," admits Nomi. "What Palestinian would risk
asking an Israeli official for his name?"
Nomi makes some more calls and is told that Faek can come to the police
station in the nearby settlement of Ariel to collect his papers. But,
in truth, Faek is trapped. He cannot get through the checkpoints
separating him from Ariel without his ID card. And even if he could
find a tortuous route around the checkpoints, he could still be
arrested for not having a licence and issued a fine of a few hundred
shekels, a small sum for Israelis but one he would struggle to pay. So
quietly he carries on waiting in the hope that the policeman will
return.
Nomi is not hopeful. "It is illegal to take his papers without giving
him a receipt but this kind of thing happens all the time. What can the
Palestinians do? They dare not argue. It's the Wild West out here."
Some time later, as the sun lowers in the sky and a chill wind picks
up, Faek is still waiting. Nomi's shift is coming to an end and we must
head back to Israel. She promises to continue putting pressure by phone
on the police to return his documents. Nearly two hours later, as I
arrive home, Faek unexpectedly calls, saying he has finally got his
papers back. But he is still not happy: he has been issued with a fine
of 500 shekels ($115) by the police. Nomi's phone is busy, he says. Can
I help get the fine reduced?
Jonathan Cook is a writer and journalist based in Nazareth, Israel. His
book, Blood and Religion: The Unmasking of the Jewish and Democratic
State, is published by Pluto Press.