[News] Al-Mughayyir: Palestinian villagers still determined to fight attacks by Israeli settlers

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Fri Jun 16 10:29:57 EDT 2023


middleeasteye.net
<https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/palestine-israel-mughayyir-villagers-determined-fight-off-settlers>
Al-Mughayyir: Palestinian villagers still determined to fight attacks by
Israeli settlers
By Fayha Shalash in Al-Mughayyir, occupied Palestine
June 16, 2023
------------------------------
[image: image.png]
Israeli forces contain Palestinian protesters during a demonstration
against settlement expansion, in the village of al-Mughayyir, east of
Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, on 29 July 2022 (Abbas Momani/AFP)

Marzouq Abu Naim gazes out every day at the land that has long been part of
his village, al-Mughayyir, northeast of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank
<https://www.middleeasteye.net/topics/occupation>.

It is agricultural land, planted with wheat and olives, tilled by
Palestinian <https://www.middleeasteye.net/countries/palestine> farmers -
Abu Naim's own ancestors - for centuries.

But he says he is only allowed to access it for one day every year to
harvest his crops. For the other 364 days he is forced to look from afar.

"We were raised to love the land, cultivate it and take care of it," Abu
Naim, 65, told Middle East Eye. "For my father and my grandparents it was
the most important thing because it was the source of their livelihood and
life. But now it has been stolen from us."

According to villagers, more than 70 percent of the land in al-Mughayyir
has been taken by the Israeli occupation, to be used as land for
settlements illegal under international law.

That has placed the village in the line of fire of those settlements, and
facing the regular closure of roads leading into the village.

The two main entrances to the village were closed for the majority of May
and into June by Israel <https://www.middleeasteye.net/countries/israel>.

In an audio recording allegedly of an Israeli officer, the speaker says
that the pretext for the closure of the roads was to stop stones and other
projectiles from being thrown at Israeli cars. Residents described the
closure as an attempt to collectively punish them for daring to confront
continued settler attacks.

<https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/west-bank-israel-settlers-attack-palestinian-farmers>

West Bank: Israeli settlers attack Palestinian farmers and torch vehicles

Abu Naim says that the closure of the roads has greatly affected the lives
of the Palestinian residents, forcing students and workers traveling to and
from the village to take unpaved roads, adding hours to their journeys.

"We have 36 teachers who come from outside the village to work in its
schools. When the entrances were closed, we had to bring a minibus that
would travel along the dirt road to transport them to the schools," Abu
Naim said. "The journey took three hours instead of 10 minutes."

The eastern entrance to the village remains closed, with vehicles owned by
Palestinians not even allowed to approach it.

MEE asked the Israeli defence ministry for comment but did receive a
response by the time of publication.
The long hand of the settlers

In marked contrast to the restrictions imposed on Palestinian freedom of
movement, residents of al-Mughayyir say Israeli settlers from the outpost
Adei Ad, and others nearby, are able to attack Palestinian homes and
agricultural land without any pushback.

The settlements were established on land belonging to al-Mughayyir several
years ago.

According to al-Mughayyir's village council, 30 sq km of the village's 41
sq km of land have been seized by Israel since the 1970s, under various
pretexts, including the establishment of a road exclusively for the use of
Israeli settlers.

'We planted the land with wheat and now the Israeli occupation is
preventing us from harvesting it'

*- Marzouq Abu Naim, villager*

"We have a lot of land behind the road that we are prevented from
reaching," Abu Naim said. "We planted the land with wheat and now the
Israeli occupation is preventing us from harvesting it. But they allow the
settlers to burn it and steal our crops without any deterrence."

In May, settlers from the outposts gathered and attacked the village
<https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/west-bank-israel-settlers-attack-palestinian-farmers>,
burning several vehicles and assaulting residents who had tried to confront
the attackers. Israeli soldiers arrested a number of the Palestinians, but
none of the settlers, according to villagers.

The villagers of al-Mughayyir have become used to the attacks, which have
taken place for decades. But they have increased in recent years, with the
UN saying that this year there have been an average of three attacks by
settlers per day, the highest since 2006. That is potentially because
settlers feel increasingly emboldened as a result of Israel's far-right
government, which includes several settlers.

Israeli settler groups have long openly called for the seizure of more
Palestinian land for outposts, deemed illegal even under Israeli law, in an
attempt to prevent Palestinians from building and expanding villages.

Amin Abu Aliya, the head of al-Mughayyir's village council, said that the
village was one of the first areas in the occupied West Bank to have its
land seized for the establishment of Israeli settlements in the 1970s.

Since the occupation of the West Bank in 1967, Israel has appropriated
Palestinian land through various methods, such as seizing land for
self-professed military purposes, manipulation of old records to claim that
land was now Israeli 'state land', and the seizure of land deemed to have
been abandoned by refugees, who are not permitted by Israel to return.

On 28 May, 17-year-old Muhammad Abu Aliya was a victim of a settler attack.
Sat in a car with friends near the eastern entrance to the village,
Muhammad says they were attacked by a group of settlers. When they tried to
flee, they say they were fired at by Israeli soldiers stationed at the
entrance.

"We were just in the eastern area of the village and the soldiers started
shooting at us," Muhammad said. "It's an area subject to a lot of attacks
from settlers, and soldiers provide them with full protection and attack us
if we defend our village."

Muhammad and a friend were shot in the incident, while another friend was
arrested after falling out of the vehicle during the shooting. Muhammad
himself was transferred to a medical centre.

"I was hit by four bullets - one that penetrated my back and exited my
chest, the second in my pelvis, and two in my legs,” Muhammad said. "I
stayed in intensive care for two days, then my health improved... I
seriously thought I was going to die."

Muhammad, still in hospital, says he has been threatened with arrest upon
his release.
Mass arrests

On 5 June, around a week after the attack described by Muhammad,
55-year-old Rabiaa Abu Naim, Marzouq Abu Naim's sister-in-law, woke up to
the sound of the door of her house being slammed open. She immediately knew
that Israeli soldiers were entering her home.

Rabiaa said the soldiers destroyed the contents of the house, rummaging
through clothes and overturning furniture under the pretext of searching
the property. They asked after her youngest son, who was accused of being
the driver of the vehicle that transported Muhammad to hospital. He was not
in the house, so they arrested another son instead, a tactic often used to
pressure wanted Palestinians to hand themselves in.

"There were dozens of them storming the house with apparent barbarism,"
Rabiaa said. "When I told them that my son wasn't here, they shouted at me,
pushed me back and then arrested my other son. After several hours, they
released him and sent a threat to his brother that he would be arrested as
soon as possible."

<https://www.middleeasteye.net/opinion/israel-settlers-second-nakba-launching-how>

'Silent transfer': How Israeli settlers are launching a second Nakba

According to the village council, more than 45 people from al-Mughayyir
have been arrested in less than a month, including a woman and her son, and
fathers with their children, with the aim of pressuring them to stop
confronting settler attacks.

According to Amin Abu Aliya, most of the detainees have been released after
paying fines, under the threat of re-arrest. But others have spent years in
prison for their actions defending the village.

But that hasn't stopped villagers from trying - in any way they can - to
hold onto their land.

"The people [of the village] gather and try to confront the settlers [when
they attack]," Amin explained. "They transport the wounded in their own
vehicles because ambulances are obstructed. And when the settlers start
burning agricultural crops, every person in the village carries water to
put the fires out."

"All of the villagers have turned into a beehive, joining hands together in
the face of this permanent danger," he added. "They're trying to preserve
what is left of their land and prevent more of it from being confiscated."
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