Palestinian Technical Team on Israel's Evacuation
Israel's
Unilateral "Disengagement"
“[The]
formula for the parameters of unilateral solution are: To maximize the
number of Jews; minimize the number of Palestinians; not to withdraw to
the 1967 border and not to divide Jerusalem.”
– Ehud
Olmert, Israel's Deputy Prime Minister
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Israeli
"Disengagement" Plan?
The Israeli "disengagement plan" (unveiled
by Israeli PM Sharon in December 2003) is a unilateral two-part plan:
(1) the evacuation of all Israeli colonies from the Occupied Gaza Strip
(with a total settler population of 7,300) and four small colonies in
the northern Occupied West Bank (with a total settler population of
475); (2) the ongoing colonization of the West Bank and its ancillary
construction of the Wall, designed to fragment Palestinian communities.
The term "disengagement" is a misnomer:
it implies that Israel will no longer control the Palestinians. Yet,
under the terms of Israel's plan, Israel will retain complete control
over the Occupied Gaza Strip as it will control all borders and crossing
points (thereby controlling the movement of goods and people),
Palestinian airspace and water space. Israel has also reserved itself
the right to reinvade the Occupied Gaza Strip at will thereby ensuring
its military control over the area. In effect, what Israel aims to
isolate the Occupied Gaza Strip and cut it off from the rest of the
world.
Why is Israel carrying out this Plan?
The Plan is part of Israel's long-term
strategy to rid itself of as many Palestinians as possible while
retaining as much Palestinian land as possible. By evacuating Israel's
colonies in the Occupied Gaza Strip, Israel can divert attention away
from its ongoing colonization in the Occupied West Bank. In exchange
for evacuating colonies in the Gaza Strip (a mere 4.8 percent of
Occupied Palestinian Territory), Israel will continue to build its
colonies and Wall in the Occupied West Bank, taking more than 45 percent
of Occupied Palestinian Territory.
What will happen to the
Israeli colonies?
The Israeli government has taken a
unilateral decision to demolish the structures in the colonies,
including houses.
But can't the houses be used to resettle Palestinians?
Not really. The Occupied Gaza Strip is
365 km2, and has an estimated Palestinian population of 1.3
million, living on 55 km2 of built-up land, making the
Occupied Gaza Strip the most densely populated place on earth. In
twenty years, the population of the Gaza Strip is expected to reach 2
million Palestinians.
Israel's colonization of the
Gaza Strip was carried out in a horizontal fashion: Israel's colonies
take up approximately 20 percent of the land of the Gaza Strip and house
a mere 7,300 settlers in 2,800 houses. These 2,800 houses will not be
able to meet the housing demands of the burgeoning Palestinian
population. Instead, the land upon which the colonies sit can be used
to build high-rise apartments to house more people while simultaneously
freeing land for investment purposes to rehabilitate the Palestinian
economy.
Where will the rubble
be taken?
For environmental reasons, the rubble
(approximately 80,000 tonnes) cannot be reused and therefore it must be
disposed of in a manner that is not hazardous. The PA insists that the
rubble cannot be stored in Gaza (for environmental, health and space
reasons) and therefore it must be transported out of the Gaza Strip.
Will the land evacuated
by Israel return to its rightful owners?
Yes. Ninety-five percent of the land upon
which Israel's colonies and military installations are built is "state
land" and accordingly will revert to the public domain upon evacuation.
The remaining five percent of the land belongs to private Palestinian
owners who will have their land returned to them in accordance with
Palestinian law.
What about the rest of
the land?
Given that the land will revert to the
public domain, projects for the public will be developed there. The
Ministry of Planning is currently revising its regional plan for the
evacuated areas and aims to build hospitals, schools and housing
projects as well as tourist locations in the areas evacuated by Israel.
What will happen to the
Gaza Strip following the evacuation?
The Palestinian Authority aims to
revitalize the Palestinian economy of the Gaza Strip by encouraging
investment and hence creating jobs. However, in order to revitalize the
economy Israel's cooperation (and international support) is necessary.
While the colonization of the Gaza Strip will end, Israel's occupation
of it will not. Currently, Israel strictly controls all access in and
out of the Occupied Gaza Strip, both for people and goods. If the
current levels of absolute control continue, the Gaza Strip will be cut
off from the Occupied West Bank and the rest of the world, thereby
turning the Gaza Strip into a large prison. For the Gazan economy to
improve and for the evacuation of the Gaza Strip to be a model of
success, Israel will have to ensure that Palestinians and their goods
are provided free movement and that the Palestinians are allowed to live
without Israeli control over their lives and economy.
Don't you feel sorry
for the settlers?
Israeli citizens were given large
incentives to move into Occupied Palestinian Territory, including large
housing subsidies, lower income tax rates and subsidies for their
factories located in Occupied Palestinian Territory. Israeli settlers
are now also being compensated for evacuating from the Occupied Gaza
Strip and are being resettled at Israel's expense in Israel.
The settlers have been the cause of
Israel's ongoing military occupation of Palestinian Territory. Their
presence has led to: (1) greater Israeli military presence in Occupied
Palestinian Territory; (2) the confiscation of Palestinian land for the
construction of Israeli-only colonies and roads, often in the name of
"security"; (3) the destruction and demolition of Palestinian homes and
historic locales and (4) led to a dual system of laws imposed in
Occupied Palestinian Territory: Israeli settlers, who number 430,000,
live under Israeli civilian law, granted superior rights to 3.5 million
Palestinians who are subject to Israeli military law, thereby denied
their freedom. Israelis are granted complete freedom of movement in
Occupied Palestinian Territory and Israel while Palestinians are
relegated to Palestinian-only roads (that lead only to Palestinian
areas), live behind hundreds of checkpoints and road barriers (situated
in Occupied Palestinian Territory) and require Israeli permission to
cross these checkpoints. Israeli settlers have been involved in a
number of crimes against Palestinians and their property that have
largely gone unprosecuted. Human rights organizations, including
Israeli, have maintained reports on such incidents.
What can be done to revitalize the Gaza Strip?
Currently, Israel exercises complete
control over the Palestinian economy by controlling the movement of
Palestinians and their goods. In the Occupied West Bank, for example,
Israel maintains hundreds of checkpoints and barriers designed to
fragment Palestinian communities. Palestinian goods are subject to a
"back-to-back" system of movement, wherein Palestinian goods are
unloaded and reloaded onto different trucks several times before
reaching their final destination. For example, goods originating from
Hebron (in the Occupied West Bank) destined for Nablus (also in the
Occupied West Bank) must be unloaded and reloaded an estimated seven
times. Obviously this increases transportation costs and the time for
which goods reach their destination.
Furthermore, Israel does not maintain
systematized rules or procedures for the movement of Palestinian goods,
thereby increasing risk and uncertainty among investors. In the Karni
terminal (the sole terminal for the movement of Palestinian goods from
the Occupied Gaza Strip), rules for the movement of goods are frequently
changed by the Israelis. Today, a mere 50 trucks per day of Palestinian
goods are allowed to leave the terminal, owing to the onerous and
unpredictable searches. Israeli goods, which do not have to go through
any security procedures are shipped in daily on more than 300 trucks.
Accordingly, Israeli goods are often less expensive to Palestinians and
Palestinian reliance upon such goods is increased.
Israel can easily improve
the economy by simply removing its barriers and checkpoints and by
allowing Palestinian goods to move based on international principles of
"door-to-door" wherein Palestinian goods are freely allowed to move
without onerous security searches that are not imposed on Israeli
goods.
By creating certainty among investors, the
economy of the Gaza Strip can be revitalized and improved. The World
Bank is in agreement with this conclusion: "Palestinian economic
recovery depends on a radical easing of internal closures throughout the
West Bank [and Gaza] the opening of Palestinian external borders to
commodity trade, and sustaining a reasonable flow of Palestinian labor
into Israel." See Disengagement,
The Palestinian Economy and the
Settlements", the World Bank, June 15, 2004.
Will Palestinians
remain subject to the same movement restrictions?
Currently, Palestinians require Israeli
permits to travel: (1) within the Occupied West Bank; (2) between the
Occupied West Bank and the Occupied Gaza Strip and (3) to Israel.
Palestinians in the Gaza Strip also require Israeli permission to cross
international boundaries to visit other countries. Such permits are
granted rarely (less than 30 percent of the Palestinian population
receives such permits) and in the Occupied Gaza Strip, approximately 90
percent of the Palestinian population
Under the Oslo Agreements, Israel was
supposed to have instituted a "safe passage" between the Occupied West
Bank and Gaza Strip to ensure freedom of movement for Palestinians
within Occupied Palestinian Territory. Passage through the "safe
passage" remained subject to strict Israeli control and in 2000 Israel
closed the safe passage route thereby isolating the Occupied Gaza Strip
from the rest of Occupied Palestinian Territory.
In order to ensure that Palestinians are
not enclosed in a large prison, freedom of movement must be guaranteed.
Yet, while Israel asserts that it wants to "disengage" from the Occupied
Gaza Strip, it wants to retain control over Palestinians and their
economy. Israel has yet to respond to whether freedom of movement for
Palestinians will be guaranteed: whether Palestinians will be able to
travel to the rest of Occupied Palestinian Territory and whether
Palestinians will continue to require Israeli permission to leave the
Gaza Strip and whether Palestinians will be able to freely travel
throughout the Occupied West Bank.
While many discussions have taken place on
the mode for transportation (sunken road, railroad, convoy), these
discussions remain inconclusive.
With respect to the Rafah terminal
(movement to Egypt), talks also remain inconclusive: While the
Palestinians continue to insist on no Israeli presence in the Rafah
terminal (and hence allow for the free movement of Palestinians), Israel
has yet to agree.
What will be the
international legal status of the evacuated areas following the
evacuation?
The Gaza Strip and the northern West Bank
will remain occupied territory.
Israel will still be subject to international obligations embodied in
the Fourth Geneva Convention and in various human rights agreements.
For 38 years Israel has carried out two
projects in the West Bank (including East Jerusalem) and the Gaza
Strip: (1) colonization of the areas through the construction of
Israeli-only housing and roads and (2) military occupation of the areas
through the imposition of Israeli military law on the areas and its
inhabitants. While the colonization process may cease in the Occupied
Gaza Strip and northern West Bank, the military occupation will
continue.
What will happen to the
airport?
The Palestinian International Airport was
opened in 1998 by Presidents Clinton and Arafat and serviced
Palestinians seeking to fly in and out of the Occupied Gaza Strip. The
airport operated under the strict control of Israel. In 2000, the
Israeli Army closed the airport and several months later destroyed the
runway and control tower, with estimated damages exceeding more than USD
$8 million. It has remained closed.
Following Israel's evacuation, the
Palestinian Authority seeks to open the airport, but, to date,
discussions with Israel have been inconclusive.
Can't the greenhouses
based in the colonies be used as a means of job creation?
The greenhouses in the colonies produce
"organic" food that is exported to European markets. The greenhouses
are heavily subsidized by the Israeli government and water is shipped in
from Israel owing to the polluted nature of the Gaza coastal aquifer.
The greenhouses currently employ approximately 4,000 Palestinians.
While, on face level, it may seem like a good idea for these greenhouses
to be maintained, unless the free movement of the goods produced in
these greenhouses can be guaranteed and unless the subsidies can be
maintained, the greenhouses will be worthless.
What will happen to the
Erez Industrial Estate?
The fate of the Erez Industrial Estate ("EIE")
remains in the hands of Israel. Currently, goods produced in the EIE do
not undergo any security or other searches before entering the Israeli
markets. After the evacuation, the EIE will revert to the Palestinian
public domain and, according to Israeli officials, goods produced there
will be subject to Israeli searches as well as the existing
"back-to-back" system for the movement of Palestinian goods. This will
undoubtedly discourage investment and likely kill the prospects of the
EIE (or any industrial area). If the Palestinian economy is to recover,
Israel's control over the Palestinian economy will have to cease: the
back-to-back system will have to be replaced immediately with the
"door-to-door" system of movement that allows goods to reach their
destination without the senseless unload/reload system employed by
Israel.
But isn't the
evacuation of colonies a good thing?
The evacuation and dismantlement of
Israel's colonies is always welcomed (owing to the fact that these
colonies are one of the reasons that the Palestinians are denied their
freedom.
However, there are two parts to Israel's
plan: one entails the evacuation of colonies (but the maintenance of
Israeli military control over the area) and the second entails the
continued colonization of the West Bank. It is irresponsible to simply
focus on one side of the equation while ignoring the other. So, while
the Palestinians may be pleased that the colonization of the Gaza Strip
is coming to an end, it is clear that the colonization of the West Bank
will be intensified. It is also clear that the military occupation of
both areas will remain. Therefore while there is much fanfare regarding
Israel's evacuation, real applause should be withheld until Israel
completely ends its military occupation of the West Bank (including East
Jerusalem) and the Gaza Strip. Until that time, Israel should be
punished for its ongoing violations of international law and human
rights – not rewarded.
Written by Diana Buttu, Communications
Director to the Palestinian Technical Team.