News Release Issued by the International Secretariat of Amnesty International

AI INDEX: MDE 15/099/2003                                    7 November 2003  

Israel/OT: Israel must immediately stop the construction of the fence/wall through
the West Bank


Amnesty International is adding its voice to worldwide protests (Starting Sunday)
against Israel's construction of the fence/wall in the Occupied West Bank. The organization
calls on the Israeli authorities to stop the construction of the fence/wall in the
West Bank that is affecting the lives of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians.

Israeli, Palestinian and international organisations are participating in or supporting
the "Stop the Wall Campaign" which has declared 9 November "the International
Day of Action against the Wall". The week-long protests start on Sunday in
many countries including Argentina, Australia, Bangladesh, Belgium, Brazil, Canada,
Chile, France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Jordan, Norway, South Africa, Spain, Sweden,
the United Kingdom and the USA.

"This fence/wall is having devastating economic and social consequences on
the daily lives of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians, separating families and
communities from each other and from their land and water - their most crucial assets,"
said Amnesty International.

Israel is continuing the construction of the fence/wall, with the second phase running
even more deeply than the first phase into the West Bank, cutting off many more
thousands of Palestinians from their land and/or from essential services in nearby
villages/towns, and further restricting the movements of all Palestinians in these
areas.

The Israeli authorities' claim that the fence/wall is being constructed to prevent
potential Palestinian attackers from entering Israel to carry out suicide bombings
and other attacks is not borne out by the reality on the ground. The fence/wall
is not being constructed on the Green Line separating Israel from the West Bank,
but mostly on Palestinian land several kilometres inside the West Bank, in order
to isolate Palestinians away from Israeli settlements illegally built in the Occupied
Territories.

"The construction of this fence/wall in its current location must be halted
immediately," said Amnesty International. "As the fence/wall continues
to snake through Palestinian land, more and more Palestinians find themselves trapped
into enclaves and cantons, unable to have any semblance of a normal life."

"Israel has the right to take reasonable, necessary and proportionate measures
to protect the security of its citizens and its borders. These include measures
to prevent the entry into Israel of Palestinians or others who are reasonably suspected
of intending to carry out suicide bombings or other attacks," Amnesty International
said.

"However, Israel does not have a right to unlawfully destroy or confiscate
Palestinian land and property and hinder the movements of Palestinians inside the
Occupied Territories in order to consolidate its control over land which is being
used for illegal Israeli settlements," the organization added.

In order to build the fence/wall large areas of mostly cultivated Palestinian land
have been destroyed. The land on which it is constructed has been seized by the
Israeli military authorities for "military needs". Although the seizure
orders for the land are generally "temporary", usually until the end of
2005, they can be renewed indefinitely. Over the decades Palestinian land "temporarily"
seized by Israel has been used to build permanent structures, including settlements
and roads for settlers, and has never been returned to its owners.

The very expensive and sophisticated structure of the fence/wall indicates that
it is likely intended as a permanent structure. Affected Palestinians have to cross
the fence/wall at designated checkpoints or gates to reach the rest of the West
Bank, to go to work, to tend their fields, to sell their agricultural produce, and
to access education and health centres in nearby towns and villages.

The Israeli authorities have consistently refused to provide advance information
about the route of the fence/wall and information about the precise routing only
become available when preparation work for the fence/wall begins on the ground or
when the authorities deliver seizure orders to the local Palestinian communities
whose land is going to be seized for the construction of the fence/wall.


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For more information, please see:

Israel and the Occupied Territories: Surviving under siege: The impact of movement
restrictions on the right to work, September 2003 (AI Index: MDE 15/001/2003) at
http://amnesty-news.c.tep1.com/maabD46aa10wibb0g8Tb/

Israel and the Occupied Territories: Surviving under siege: The impact of movement
restrictions on the right to work: Executive Summary, September 2003 (AI Index:
MDE 15/064/2003) at http://amnesty-news.c.tep1.com/maabD46aa10wjbb0g8Tb/

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