by Meron Rapoport
June 18, 2004
Le Monde DiplomatiqueThe farmers of Irtah, a village near the West Bank market town of Tulkarem, can still see their land. But they haven’t had access to it for more than a year because the trenches, walls and barbed wire of Israel’s "security fence" lie between their hilltop homes and the fields. Now the Israeli army is threatening officially to confiscate the 500 dunams they are forbidden to access (1). The fate of this land is almost certainly determined: an industrial estate will be built astride the fence, funded jointly by the Israeli authorities and Palestinian entrepreneurs. The farmers, left without land, will have no choice but to work in the new factories for a minimum wage set at barely a third of Israel’s official minimum.
Tulkarem is not alone. While the fence is a long way from being finished (200km out of a planned 700km have been built), Israel’s minister for industry, trade and employment, Ehud Olmert, is pressing for a chain of industrial estates to be set up along its length. Some sections of the army, especially those engaged in patrolling the Palestinian territories, consider this project as a continuation of the fence.
"You’ll see, it will be very nice," said the commander of Tulkarem’s military headquarters as he inspected a gate in the wall, which encroaches on Palestinian territory by almost 3km. The Middle East division manager at the industry and trade ministry, Gabi Bar, said: "We will set up an industrial park here and it will be just fine. The Palestinians really need sites like this."
If the security situation were not so delicate, these estates might be built in the Nablus area: as it is, lining them up along the wall is a less risky option. The idea is not new. After the 1993 Oslo accords Israeli and Palestinian officials agreed a plan to create nine industrial estates along the Green Line (2) in the West Bank and Gaza. From Jenin in the north to Rafah in the south, the estates were to provide jobs for some 100,000 Palestinians. With the start of the intifada, the plans had to be shelved. Days into the uprising, an angry mob of Palestinians burnt down the embryonic Buds of Peace estate near Tulkarem. Another estate, near the dam at Erez on the border between the Gaza Strip and Israel, has been frequently attacked by the Palestinian resistance.
However the estates are still functioning and 4,500 Palestinians have jobs on the Erez estate while 500 work at Tulkarem’s Buds of Peace. But until now no one had considered building a new industrial area along the Green Line. The idea has been revived because of the wall. This barrier has exacerbated the already chronic problem of Palestinian unemployment (45% in the West Bank and 60% in Gaza); 120,000 Palestinians who worked legally or not in Israel before 2000 can no longer go there. And tens of thousands of peasants are now separated from their own lands by the wall. Yet Israeli businesses feel confident about estates near the wall because of the high level of security.
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=22&ItemID=5735