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Monday, June 22, 2009

Fictions on the ground By Tony Judt, New York Times,

Fictions on the ground
By Tony Judt, New York Times, June 22, 2009

Israel needs “settlements.” They are intrinsic to the image it has long sought to convey to overseas admirers and fund-raisers: a struggling little country securing its rightful place in a hostile environment by the hard moral work of land clearance, irrigation, agrarian self-sufficiency, industrious productivity, legitimate self-defense and the building of Jewish communities. But this neo-collectivist frontier narrative rings false in modern, high-tech Israel. And so the settler myth has been transposed somewhere else — to the Palestinian lands seized in war in 1967 and occupied illegally ever since.

It is thus not by chance that the international press is encouraged to speak and write of Jewish “settlers” and “settlements” in the West Bank. But this image is profoundly misleading. The largest of these controversial communities in geographic terms is Maale Adumim. It has a population in excess of 35,000, demographically comparable to Montclair, N.J., or Winchester, England. What is most striking, however, about Maale Adumim is its territorial extent. This “settlement” comprises more than 30 square miles — making it one and a half times the size of Manhattan and nearly half as big as the borough and city of Manchester, England. Some “settlement.”

There are about 120 official Israeli settlements in the occupied territories of the West Bank. In addition, there are “unofficial” settlements whose number is estimated variously from 80 to 100. Under international law, there is no difference between these two categories; both are contraventions of Article 47 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which explicitly prohibits the annexation of land consequent to the use of force, a principle re-stated in Article 2(4) of the United Nations Charter. [continued…]
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/22/opinion/22judt.html?_r=1

1 comment:

Unknown said...

What are "illegal" settlements? The Land of Israel was promised as a Jewish homeland after World War I. The British had a mandate to create one there, but no mandate to prevent its formation.
"Equity," a principle of Engish and American law: That which should have been done is deemed to have been done. Arab claims to any part of "Palestine" are based only on illegal seizure of the land by force. Israel is only reclaiming its own.