Fears grow Israel set to raze West Bank Bedouin village

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KHAN AL-AHMAR, Palestinian Territories, July 4, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Residents
and activists voiced concern on Wednesday that Israel is set to raze a
Bedouin village in a strategic part of the occupied West Bank ignoring
international calls for a reprieve.

Activists said the Israeli military issued a warrant to the 173 residents
of Khan al-Ahmar on Tuesday authorising it to seize access roads to the
village.

Heavy equipment, including at least one bulldozer, were seen around the
village on Wednesday, leading to speculation a road was being prepared to
facilitate its evacuation and demolition.

“Today they are proceeding with infrastructure work to facilitate the
demolition and forcible transfer of residents,” Amit Gilutz, spokesman for
Israeli human rights group B’Tselem, told AFP.

Israeli authorities say the village and its school were built illegally and
in May, the supreme court rejected a final appeal against its demolition.

But activists say the villagers had little alternative but to build without
Israeli construction permits as the documents are near impossible for
Palestinians to obtain for that part of the occupied West Bank.

Israel authorities say they have offered villagers a relocation site. They
did not immediately responded to a request for comment on Wednesday.

Britain’s minister of state for the Middle East, Alistair Burt, visited the
village in May and called on the Israeli government to show restraint.

He warned that any forced relocation “could constitute forcible transfer of
people as far as the United Nations is concerned.”

Forcible transfer is considered a violation of the Geneva Conventions.

Khan al-Ahmar is located east of Jerusalem near several Israeli settlements
along a road leading to the Dead Sea.

Activists are concerned continued Israeli settlement construction in the
area could effectively divide the West Bank in two.