2006-03-20

Genevieve Cora Fraser

___________________________

Israel's wall securing control of West Bank's water

by Agence France Presse (AFP)

NAZLET ISA, West Bank: Israel's vast separation barrier slices Nazlet Isa off from one of the richest water sources in the arid northern West Bank where the fight for water is a fight for survival. Israel is believed to monopolize around 75 percent of Palestinian water resources in a region where rainfall is infrequent and water a strategic asset.

In the agriculture-dependent Palestinian territories, hemmed in by Jewish settlements, the lack of resources causes havoc for farmers, while pollution and inadequate waste disposal create manifold sanitation and health problems.

In the northern West Bank town of Nazlet Isa, giant concrete slabs 10 meters high - lambasted as an apartheid wall by the Palestinians - have left six homes stranded on the Israeli side along with the rich underground aquifer.

A special system of pipes to access the water was finally built with Israeli permission but immediate access and control has passed into other hands.

"The route of the wall matches that of water resources, the latter being conveniently located on the Israeli side," said Elisabeth Sime, director of aid organization CARE International, in the Gaza Strip and West Bank.

The Palestinians are adamant that the wall - which they see anyway as a land grab designed to delimit the borders of their promised future state - was built deliberately to siphon off the aquifer.

Israel says it was built for security reasons to prevent suicide bombers infiltrating Israel or Jewish settlements.

"With the wall, the Israelis clearly sought to commandeer water resources," charges Hind Khury, a former Palestinian Cabinet minister responsible for Jerusalem and now the government's representative in Paris.

"Without water, there is no life. Israeli policy has always been to push Palestinians into the desert," he added.

Abdel-Rahman Tamimi, director of the nongovernmental Palestinian Hydrology Group (PHG), said the coincidence of the route of the wall with the layout of the region's aquifers was no accident.

"The wall cuts some communities off from their only source of water, prevents tanker trucks from getting around and puts up prices," he said.

In Qalqiliyya, in the northern West Bank, around 20 wells, or 30 percent of the town's resources, were lost because of the wall, Tamimi says.

While agriculture accounts for nearly a third of Palestinian Gross Domestic Product, only 5 percent of Palestinian land is irrigated.

On the other hand, 70 percent of Israeli and Jewish settlement land is watered, even if agriculture amounts to barely 2 percent of Israeli GDP.

"The fact that Israel confiscates and overexploits water affects every sector of Palestinian economic life and causes problems for the chances of development in the region and therefore chances of peace," Tamimi said.

More than 220 communities in the West Bank - around 320,000 people - are unconnected to mains water.

Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians are therefore forced to buy water from trucks - an expense many can ill afford - to supplement local supplies that often fall woefully short of requirements.

One such consumer is weather-beaten 76-year-old Nazmi Abdel-Ghani. Clutching clumps of soil and turning to the heavens, the grandfather of 100 is desperate. "I can't go on like this. My land is parched and I'm ruined."

In the small town of Attil, at least a third of the local drinking water is contaminated by sewage and pesticides. Nine-year-old Fatima, her eyes misted with fever, routinely falls sick.

Waste and feces from neighboring houses run down the hill and seep through the floors and walls of Fatima's home. They slowly eat away at its foundations and emit a hideous stench.

Doctor Hossam Madi says diarrhea, gastroenteritis, fever, kidney failure, infection and dermatological problems blight most Palestinian children and persist into adulthood because of poor water supplies.

"The quality of water is getting worse and worse," said CARE's Sime. "A high proportion of new-born babies die of water-born infections. In the long run, Israelis will be affected by the pollution of water in the Palestinian territories."

Water supply problems faced by Palestinians are unfortunately typical of those hoping to be dealt with at the World Water Forum, which opened in Mexico City on Thursday. The March 16-22 forum hopes to help shape global strategy to improve distribution and eradicate waste of the precious resource that increasingly leads to conflict. - AFP Copyright (c) 2006 The Daily Star

     
© Fiat Lux 2004 - 2005