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Thursday, January 19, 2012

What a shock: EU report on 'Palestinians' based on NGO's and lies

Last week, I did a post on a report issued by the European Union that was the first shot in salvo of attacks by the Europeans against Israeli policies in Judea and Samaria. The report is now online, and I have uploaded it to ScribD and am embedding it below.

EU report on Israeli activity in Judea and Samaria

Like the Goldstone Report, this report is based on the unproven rantings of radical NGO's.

Legal scholar Avi Bell has analyzed part of the report, and was kind enough to share the insights below with me, and to allow me to share them with you.
The preposterous population figures of the Jordan Valley interested me.

So I first went to the EU report. This is the key paragraph: "According to Save the Children UK (SCUK) Fact Sheet on the Jordan Valley of October 2009 more than 90% of the Jordan Valley is designated as Area C. Prior to the Israeli occupation in 1967 the Palestinian population of the Jordan Valley was estimated at between 200,000 and 320,000. As of 2009 the population is approximately 56,000 with roughly 70% of residents concentrated in the City of Jericho (located in Area A). ..." The citation is to http://www.savethechildren.org.uk/en/docs/English_Jordan_Valley_Fact_Sheet_and_Citations.pdf.

That link is stale, but I found the fact sheet at http://www.ochaopt.org/documents/opt_prot_savethechildren_Jordan_Valley_Fact_Sheet_oct_2009.pdf. The fact sheet has the following statement in bullet points under the heading "Background": "Prior to the Israeli occupation in 1967, the Palestinian population of the Jordan Valley was estimated at between 200,000 and 320,000. [MA’AN]". No other reference is given.

While the MA'AN in question is not identified, it appears to be the Ma'an Development Center, which put out a 2008 report called Palestine's Forgotten Displacement: The Plight of the Jordan Valley Bedouin (http://www.maan-ctr.org/pdfs/JordanValleyreport-English.pdf) with the following paragraph on page 18: "... While exact figures for displacement and in particular displacement of Jordan Valley Bedouin do not exist, comparisons of data from the time of Jordanian rule and today suggest that the region has suffered significant forced displacement. Prior to 1967 estimates range from 200,000 to 320,000 people who lived in the Jordan Valley. Today however the total population is set between 52,000 to 56,000 (for the greater Jordan Valley). Local community leaders also say that approximately 90 per cent of the villages that existed prior to 1967 have disappeared from the map." Needless to say, no sources are cited. Page 19 offers the following, again without sources: "Though Bedouin are disproportionately affected, residents across the Jordan Valley are especially vulnerable to displacement. Since the 1950s, the population has decreased from around 300,000 to only 56,000 today."

According to subsequent Ma'an reports, the pre-1967 population has increased to first 300,000-320,000 and then to 320,000-350,000.

Page 8 of the 2010 Ma’an publication Bankrolling Colonialism: How US Zionist Organizations in the Jordan Valley are Undermining a Future Palestinian State," jointly published with the Jordan Valley Popular Committees (http://www.maan-ctr.org/pdfs/Settlement.pdf) states that "The Palestinian population of the Jordan Valley is 58,000 approximately 2% of the Palestinian population in the West Bank. 70% of Jordan Valley residents live in the city of Jericho. Prior to the 1967 occupation the population was estimated at between 300,000 and 320,000." The latter population number is cited to “Jordan Valley Solidarity http://www.jordanvalleysolidarity.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=34:geographyanddemographics&catid=3:geography&Itemid=3.” That site states, “When Israel occupied the Jordan Valley in 1967, 320,000 people resided in the area. Following the continued Israeli campaign of creeping ethnic cleansing, only 56,000 Palestinians still reside in the Valley on a permanent basis today.” Jordan Valley Solidarity’s citation for the 320,000 figure is to a dead link in the site of the “Popular Struggle Coordination Committee” (http://popularstruggle.org/content/jordan-valley#sdendnote1sym). But while the link is dead, the apparent reference is to a 2009 report by the Popular Struggle Coordination Committee called an Eye on the Jordan Valley (http://www.popularstruggle.org/node/12) which states, “when Israel occupied the Jordan Valley in 1967, 320,000 people resided in the area.” The footnote cites: “‘Eye on the Jordan Valley: To exist is to resist’: The Grassroots Palestinian Anti Apartheid Wall Campaign: May 07.” Eye on the Jordan Valley: To exist Is to Resist from May 2007 turns out to be a fact sheet put out by Ma’an and The Grassroots Palestinian Anti-Apartheid Wall Campaign (http://www.ochaopt.org/documents/opt_districtprofile_maan_jordanvalley_1_may_2007.pdf). Page 14 contains the following statement without citation: “Between 1948 and 1967, the Palestinian population of the area from Ein Gedi in the south to Bisan in the north reached 320,000. However, once the occupation began, hundreds of Palestinians were killed; dozens of Palestinian communities were leveled; and Palestinian residents were forced to immigrate to Jordan.” (In other words, if you go through the string of citations, Ma’an cited itself as the source.)

Eye on the Jordan Valley, a 2010 report jointly published by Ma’an with the Jordan Valley Popular Committees (http://www.maan-ctr.org/pdfs/Eyeon theJVReportFinal.pdf) states on page 26, without any citation of sources, “Between 1948 and 1967, the Palestinian population of the area from Ein Gedi in the south to Bisan in the north was around 320,000. However, once the occupation began, hundreds of Palestinians were killed, dozens of Palestinian communities were leveled, and Palestinian residents were forced to emigrate. Currently, only 52,000 Palestinians permanently live in the Jordan Valley.”

Page 42 of Ma’an’s 2011 "Diary" (http://www.maan-ctr.org/pdfs/Agenda2011.pdf) states that "when Israel began occupying the fertile Jordan Valley in 1967, 320,000 Palestinians lived in the region. ... Since 1967, Israel has managed to decrease the Palestinian population in the Valley by 82.5% to only 56,000." Of course, no sources are cited.

Restricted Access and Its Consequences: Israeli Control of Vital Resources in the Jordan Valley and Its Impact on the Environment, a 2011 report by Ma’an (http://www.maan-ctr.org/pdfs/FSReport/restricted-access.pdf), states on page 2: “In addition to the extremely adverse effects on Palestinian population levels in the Jordan Valley, decreasing from over 320,000 in 1967 to 52,000 today, the Israeli policies have had grave consequences for the Palestinian agricultural sector and have produced a number of continuing and residual environmental concerns.” Footnote 44 on page 41, in the meantime, states: “There has been speculation that the unjust treatment of Palestinians in the Jordan Valley is part of a strategy to cleanse Palestinians from the area in an effort to facilitate complete annexation of the valuable area by Israel. The Palestinian population of the Jordan Valley has decreased by 82% since 1967, from 350,000 to 56,000 today.” No sources are cited and no explanation given of the additional retroactive jump from 320,000 to 350,000.

Finally, the following statement appears in the publication “To Exist is to Resist: Save the Jordan Valley,” jointly put out by Ma’an Development Center and Jordan Valley Popular Committees (http://www.maan-ctr.org/pdfs/exit.pdf): “Jordan Valley has been under complete occupation since 1967. Prior to the 6-day war, the population of the Jordan Valley was between 300,000 and 320,000. The population now stands at 53,000 of which about 70% live in the city of Jericho.” The August 2010 Ma’an’s bi-monthly “Developmental Focus” explains the publication as follows: “MA’AN’s publication To Exist is to Resist – Save the Jordan Valley outlines the situation of the Jordan Valley in an easy accessible coffee table format. The Latest Publications book is made in cooperation with the Local Popular Committees in the Jordan Valley and funded by the Representative Office of Norway.” The same article tells us, “Together with MA’AN Development Center, the Palestinian National Authority and international solidarity groups, the Jordan Valley Solidarity Campaign is working with the Palestinians in the Jordan Valley at the grassroots level. The slogan of the campaign; ‘To Exist is to Resist’ emphasizes the importance of remaining in the Jordan Valley to resist Israeli apartheid, colonialism and forced displacement in order to keep working for a future Palestinian state.” (http://www.maan-ctr.org/pdfs/Newsl.pdf, page 8).

To sum up, the figures in the EU report, while cited to Save the Children UK, apparently come from a report by a Palestinian organization called Ma’an. The Ma’an figures vary from report to report, and are cited to no external sources whatsoever.

And how good are the Ma’an sources? They are obviously made up.

You can find Israel’s 1967 census of the West Bank here - http://www.levyinstitute.org/palestinian-census/. There is no breakdown of figures for the Jordan Valley, but the total West Bank figure is 598,637, with only 9,078 in the Jericho district. Interestingly, if you take the figures for the Jericho, Nablus, Tulkarm, and Jenin districts together, you get to 311,983. This suggests to me that the figure of 320,000 is the entire Samaria north of Ramallah. (The other districts are Jerusalem, Ramallah, Bethlehem and Hebron).

Hmmm. You don't think the Europeans would knowingly lie now, do you?

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4 Comments:

At 12:27 AM, Blogger Sunlight said...

After going along with, if not aiding or participating in, the industrial slaughter of 6 million Jews, it is completely beyond my comprehension that Israelis (and U.S. leftists) go on and on being shocked, shocked, I tell you, when the Euros do this. They didn't finish it off, so they are aiding the neighbors to do in the next 6 million in so many ways.... lies are only one. And the Euros who think that what happened (even with their own family members and neighbors doing it) has nothing to do with them and that maybe this constant stabbing of Israel will slow Israel down in the international technology market competition, which Israel is leading regardless. The number one thing Israel could do, which you seemingly will never do, is set up the online GIS maps and layers, with title information by year, links to scanned receipts, document, book chapters, whatever, which describe land ownership (did you guys actually buy the Golan from Syria as is "rumored"?)... These Euros will have to expose themselves in advocating for confiscation of Jewish owned property, just like their grandparents did, which could well be their goal anyway. Got to get any value they can away from Israel before Iran nukes it. What an embarrassment these Euros are. Ugh.

 
At 12:48 PM, Blogger Chris said...

Shlomo Gazit..."More than 200,000 people abandoned the region (West Bank) following the fighting and the first few months following it. This mass exodus was largely composed of some 70,000 refugee camp residents in the Jericho region and later most of it passed through a 'family unification' process, whereby inhabitants of the region, fearful of remaining isolated and separated, joined family members who had sojourned outside the region during the war."

Nearly 200,000 refugees were displaced for a second time and 240,000 Palestinians became refugees for the first time (Takkenberg, 1998). (1967)

B'tselem (who I am sure loves the holocaust and slaughter of Jewish kids): An Israeli source puts the figure at 200,000 refugees. See Future of the Jordan Valley, 15.

So, whether the figure is 200,000 or 320,000, how does that change the fact that the Palestinians in the Jordan Valley are systematically oppressed by the state of Israel? So because it might've been 200,000 does that mean that the village of Zbeidat, 2000 Palestinians only allowed to live on 42 dunums is justifed? But if it were 320,000 it is not? When herders near Ein al-Hilwe get their animals stolen by settlers in Maskiot and taken to the settlement, is it justified because "only" 150,000 or 200,000 people were kicked out of their homes? Does this change the fact that Palestinians have to pay more for the same water and have quotes put on their usage while settlers in the Jordan Valley use 6.6 times as much water?
Insert generic excuse for atrocities...here

 
At 12:48 PM, Blogger Chris said...

Shlomo Gazit..."More than 200,000 people abandoned the region (West Bank) following the fighting and the first few months following it. This mass exodus was largely composed of some 70,000 refugee camp residents in the Jericho region and later most of it passed through a 'family unification' process, whereby inhabitants of the region, fearful of remaining isolated and separated, joined family members who had sojourned outside the region during the war."

Nearly 200,000 refugees were displaced for a second time and 240,000 Palestinians became refugees for the first time (Takkenberg, 1998). (1967)

B'tselem (who I am sure loves the holocaust and slaughter of Jewish kids): An Israeli source puts the figure at 200,000 refugees. See Future of the Jordan Valley, 15.

So, whether the figure is 200,000 or 320,000, how does that change the fact that the Palestinians in the Jordan Valley are systematically oppressed by the state of Israel? So because it might've been 200,000 does that mean that the village of Zbeidat, 2000 Palestinians only allowed to live on 42 dunums is justifed? But if it were 320,000 it is not? When herders near Ein al-Hilwe get their animals stolen by settlers in Maskiot and taken to the settlement, is it justified because "only" 150,000 or 200,000 people were kicked out of their homes? Does this change the fact that Palestinians have to pay more for the same water and have quotes put on their usage while settlers in the Jordan Valley use 6.6 times as much water?
Insert generic excuse for atrocities...here

 
At 12:49 PM, Blogger Chris said...

Shlomo Gazit..."More than 200,000 people abandoned the region (West Bank) following the fighting and the first few months following it. This mass exodus was largely composed of some 70,000 refugee camp residents in the Jericho region and later most of it passed through a 'family unification' process, whereby inhabitants of the region, fearful of remaining isolated and separated, joined family members who had sojourned outside the region during the war."

Nearly 200,000 refugees were displaced for a second time and 240,000 Palestinians became refugees for the first time (Takkenberg, 1998). (1967)

B'tselem (who I am sure loves the holocaust and slaughter of Jewish kids): An Israeli source puts the figure at 200,000 refugees. See Future of the Jordan Valley, 15.

So, whether the figure is 200,000 or 320,000, how does that change the fact that the Palestinians in the Jordan Valley are systematically oppressed by the state of Israel? So because it might've been 200,000 does that mean that the village of Zbeidat, 2000 Palestinians only allowed to live on 42 dunums is justifed? But if it were 320,000 it is not? When herders near Ein al-Hilwe get their animals stolen by settlers in Maskiot and taken to the settlement, is it justified because "only" 150,000 or 200,000 people were kicked out of their homes? Does this change the fact that Palestinians have to pay more for the same water and have quotes put on their usage while settlers in the Jordan Valley use 6.6 times as much water?
Insert generic excuse for atrocities...here

 

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