Area around Qasr al-Yahud.—Reuters
Area around Qasr al-Yahud.—Reuters

QASR AL-YAHUD (West Bank): Israeli and foreign engineers sounded the all-clear on Sunday around three churches on the western bank of the River Jordan, near where Jesus is believed to have been baptised, after mines that had marooned the shrines for decades were cleared.

The river banks were once a war zone between Israel and Jordan, and were littered with thousands of landmines and unexploded ordnance. The two neighbours made peace in 1994 but it took many years before the defusing and clearing began.

Seven churches have lain abandoned for more than 50 years in the area of operations, about a kilometre from the Qasr al-Yahud baptism site in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, which is a major draw for Christian pilgrims.

Israel’s Defence Ministry said on Sunday that mine-clearing had been completed around three of the shrines — belonging to the Franciscan order and the Greek Orthodox and Ethiopian churches — though they have yet to be formally opened to the clergy or the public.

Work around the other four shrines — Syrian Orthodox, Coptic, Russian Orthodox and Roman Catholic — would take months to complete, Israel said. Engineers worry that some of them might have been booby-trapped.

The Halo Trust, a Scottish-based charity that has cleared minefields worldwide and was once sponsored by the late Princess Diana, has also been involved in the project near Qasr al-Yahud.

Published in Dawn, December 10th, 2018

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