Beit Jala: Israeli workers place the new section of the separation barrier.—AFP
Beit Jala: Israeli workers place the new section of the separation barrier.—AFP

BEIT JALA: Israel began construction on a controversial part of its separation barrier in the occupied West Bank on Thursday, near a Palestinian Christian town.

Cranes began lifting eight-metre(yard)-high blocks into place near Beit Jala, south of Jerusalem and close to Bethlehem, a photographer witnessed. This part of the wall could cut Palestinians from their olive groves.

Nicola Khamis, mayor of Beit Jala, condemned what he saw as a land grab.

“This land is for our families, our children,” he said by phone from the bridge next to the construction site.

The Israeli army referred questions to the defence ministry, which did not immediately respond.

Residents of Beit Jala fear the construction of the wall may lead to the expansion of the nearby Israeli settlements of Gilo and Har Gilo.

Khamis said they hoped to battle the wall’s construction, with emergency strategy meetings planned, but he conceded they had no further appeals within the Israeli legal system.

After a nine-year legal battle, Israel’s high court ruled in July 2015 the wall was legitimate, making only small adjustments.

“Without this land all the Christians will leave this country,” Khamis said. “It is impossible to build in Beit Jala. We want to widen Beit Jala.” Israel began building the barrier of walls and fences inside the occupied West Bank in 2002 at the height of the second Palestinian intifada (uprising), saying it was crucial for security.

The Palestinians see it as a land grab aimed at stealing part of their future state and call it the “apartheid wall”.

“It is consistent with the Israeli government’s policy of consolidating apartheid in the West Bank,” Xavier Abu Eid, a spokesman for the Palestine Liberation Organisation, said of Thursday’s construction. “It destroys the prospects for Bethlehem to grow”.

Published in Dawn, April 8th, 2016

Opinion

Editorial

Pakistan’s moment
Updated 20 Jun, 2026

Pakistan’s moment

Pakistan’s diplomats are second to none, and if these states seek to engage this country constructively, a new modus vivendi for the subcontinent can be reached.
Menacing water plans
20 Jun, 2026

Menacing water plans

IN April last year, India suspended the decades-old Indus Waters Treaty, which contains no provision allowing it to...
World Refugee Day
20 Jun, 2026

World Refugee Day

WORLD Refugee Day, observed today around the globe, marks 75 years since the adoption of the 1951 convention ...
Digital deal
19 Jun, 2026

Digital deal

THINGS have moved rapidly where the Iran-US memorandum of understanding is concerned. While the physical document ...
Failing the public
19 Jun, 2026

Failing the public

WHETHER it is Sindh’s struggle to secure clean drinking water or Balochistan’s difficulty in improving the...
Crushed lives
19 Jun, 2026

Crushed lives

COURTS and commissions have often been up in arms over the health and ecological hazards associated with...