Israeli court OKs West Bank expulsion

Israelis climb a tank in a weapons display Thursday during celebrations of Israel’s 74th Independence Day, at Gush Etzion Industrial Park in the West Bank. Israel’s Supreme Court upheld an expulsion of Palestinian hamlets in the occupied territory.
(AP/Tsafrir Abayov)
Israelis climb a tank in a weapons display Thursday during celebrations of Israel’s 74th Independence Day, at Gush Etzion Industrial Park in the West Bank. Israel’s Supreme Court upheld an expulsion of Palestinian hamlets in the occupied territory. (AP/Tsafrir Abayov)

JERUSALEM -- Israel's Supreme Court has upheld a long-standing expulsion order against eight Palestinian hamlets in the occupied West Bank, potentially leaving at least 1,000 people homeless, an Israeli rights group representing the villagers said Thursday.

The verdict, issued late Wednesday as Israel largely shut down for its Independence Day, marks the end of a more than two-decade legal struggle by Palestinians in the Masafer Yatta region of the southern West Bank to maintain communities they say go back decades.

"Without warning in the middle of the night, the Israeli High Court of Justice published a verdict with unprecedented consequences," the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which has represented the residents throughout the process, said.

"The High Court has officially authorized leaving entire families, with their children and their elderly, without a roof over their heads," it said.

Roni Pelli, an attorney at the association, said the verdict is final and it's not clear if there are any further legal steps that can be taken. The forcible displacement of the communities could happen at any time, she told reporters.

The military declared the area a firing and training zone in the early 1980s. Israeli authorities have argued that the residents only used the area for seasonal agriculture and had no permanent structures there at the time. In November 1999, security forces expelled some 700 villagers and destroyed homes and cisterns, the association said. The legal battle began the following year.

In its ruling late Wednesday, the Supreme Court sided with the state and said the villagers had rejected a compromise that would have allowed them to enter the area at certain times and practice agriculture for part of the year.

The military said the ruling had confirmed "that the firing zone was duly declared in accordance with the Military Commander's authority, due to military and security needs."

The families say they have been there for decades, from long before Israel captured the West Bank in the 1967 Mideast war. They practice a traditional form of desert agriculture and animal herding, with some living in caves at least part of the year, but say their only homes are in the hardscrabble communities now at risk of demolition.

"The occupation court just decided: My community will be destroyed," tweeted Basel Adra, a prominent activist from the area. "The army can now place us on trucks, 2,400 people, and expel us from our ancient villages, one by one."

The West Bank has been under Israeli military rule for nearly 55 years. Masafer Yatta is in the 60% of the territory where the Palestinian Authority is prohibited from operating. The Palestinians want the West Bank to form the main part of their future state.

Israel halted plans to formally annex parts of the West Bank in 2020, but it retains overall control over the territory, with the Palestinian Authority administering major population centers and cooperating with it on security matters. Nearly 500,000 Jewish settlers live in the West Bank, which is home to nearly 3 million Palestinians.

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