In photos: the dark reality in the occupied Jordan Valley
The Jordan
valley is part of the Jordan rift valley. Through it flows the Jordan river
which demarcates the boundary between Israel and Jordan. Nearly all of it lies
in Area C under the Oslo Accords and is
thus in complete control of Israeli forces.
It is the centre of Israel’s agribusiness and the Israeli military go to
extraordinary lengths to prevent Palestinians erecting any form of building or
development. Palestinians form the cheap
labour on the settlement farms.
From the very start of Israel’s occupation of the West Bank Israeli politicians
such as Israeli Labour’s Yigal Allon made it clear that the Jordan Valley would
never be relinquished.
These pictures by Antony Lowenstein give a glimpse of the harassment that
Palestinians face at the hands of the military and the settlers.
This first appeared on Mondoweiss
Tony Greenstein
In photos: the dark reality in the occupied Jordan Valley
Antony Loewenstein spends a day in the Jordan Valley reporting on the nightmarish situation for many Palestinian shepherds as they attempt to graze their land.
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The Israeli occupation of Palestine is largely reported in the Western
media, if it all, through the lens of the West Bank and Gaza. These areas
contain millions of Palestinians whose lives are controlled by the Israeli army
and hundreds of thousands of Jewish settlers. The Jordan Valley, situated in
the West Bank, is given less attention within that press coverage. It’s almost
invisible in the Israeli media (with a 2011 poll finding that most Israelis didn’t
even know the Jewish state was occupying the area). There are nearly
65,000 Palestinians living there along with 11,000 Israeli settlers.
I’ve recently spent time in the Jordan Valley reporting on the nightmarish situation for many
Palestinian shepherds and residents in the face of constant Israeli army
attacks, arrests and abuse. Extreme settlers, working with the military, are
literally trying to push Palestinians off their land.
The following photo essay documents one day in the life of Palestinians
in the Jordan Valley.
Traveling from Jerusalem to the Jordan Valley is a short drive past countless Palestinian villages, Israeli checkpoints and illegal Israeli settlements. (Photo: Antony Loewenstein) |
Israeli activist Guy Hirschfeld works every day in the Jordan Valley to defend Palestinian shepherds against the Israeli army and settlers. (Photo: Antony Loewenstein) |
Palestinian shepherd Ahmed arrives with his sheep and is soon surrounded by the Israeli army and told to leave because it is a closed military zone. (Photo: Antony Loewenstein)
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An Israeli army jeep crisscrosses the Jordan Valley, on daily patrol in the area. (Photo: Antony Loewenstein)
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The calm before the storm in the beauty, stillness and roughness of the Jordan Valley. (Photo: Antony Loewenstein)
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Israeli activist Guy Hirschfeld argues with Israeli soldiers. He explains that they’re doing the work of the settlers by kicking Palestinian shepherds off their land. (Photo: Antony Loewenstein) |
Hirschfeld tells an Israeli soldier that she has no right to block Palestinian freedom of movement in the area, but the military says otherwise. (Photo: Antony Loewenstein)
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Palestinian shepherd Ahmed is told by Israeli soldiers that he must leave the area. (Photo: Anthony Loewenstein)
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Hirschfeld shows an Israeli soldier photos and videos he’s shot throughout the day, documenting the actions of the army in the Jordan Valley. (Antony Loewenstein)
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An Israeli soldier guards the Palestinian shepherd, Mohammed in the moments before he is taken to a nearby army base. (Photo: Antony Loewenstein)
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Antony
Loewenstein is a Jerusalem-based, independent, investigative
journalist who has written for the New York Times, Guardian and many others,
author of “My
Israel Question” and “Disaster Capitalism: Making A Killing Out Of Catastrophe,”
amongst others, writer of the documentary “Disaster
Capitalism” and will be releasing a book on the global “war on
drugs” in 2019. He’s been reporting on Israel/Palestine since 2003.
Other posts by Antony Loewenstein.
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