Water Apartheid in Palestine – A Crime Against Humanity
by alethoBy Ayman Rabi | The Ecologist | March 22, 2014
This week the UN celebrated World Water Day - a
day to remember the billion people who are unable to meet their needs
for safe, clean water due to drought, poverty and official neglect.
But
it’s also a day to remember, and fight for, 2.1 million Palestinians
who suffer something different – an artificial water scarcity
deliberately created and sustained by Israel’s military occupation, and
the private Israeli water company Mekorot.
Increased
international pressure brings hope that the tide may be finally turning
for Palestinians striving for water justice in the West Bank and Gaza –
in particular, recent investment and partnership decisons against
Mekarot, which runs Israel’s discriminatory water policy in the West
Bank.
Waterless in Gaza and East Jerusalem
The situation in Gaza is
especially dire. The tiny, densely populated territory relies entirely
on its depleted, saltwater-contaminated and sewage-polluted aquifer, and
the water it produces is unfit for consumption. Water has to be bought,
expensively, in bottles or from mobile tanks.
Moreover
restrictions on fuel imports mean that Gaza’s single power station
spends most of its time idle – and so long as it’s not running water and
sewage cannot be pumped. So the taps are dry, toilets are blocked, and
sewage pollution gets worse.
Not that Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem have it a lot better. As reported on 17th March,
the city suffered a long water cut beginning on 4th March leaving Ras
Shehada, Ras Khamis, Dahyat A’salam and the Shuafat refugee camp – cut
off from the rest of the city by the separation wall – with no running
water.
The reason is simple – old and inadequate water infrastructure, which there are no plans to improve or renew.
Oslo II Accords – the Palestinians were shafted
For
West Bank as a whole the facts speak for themselves. The Oslo II
Accords dealt Palestinians a singularly poor hand - limiting the volume
of water it could produce, as well as imposing severe restrictions on
the development and maintenance of Palestinian water infrastructure.
The
Accords allow Palestinans to abstract only 118 million cubic meters
(mcm) per year from boreholes, wells, springs and precipitation in the
West Bank. But Israel is allowed to take four times as much – 483 mcm
per year – from the same Palestinian resources.
So
not only does Israel now occupy 80% of the area of historic Palestine,
but it – via the water company Mekarot – also takes 80% of the water
resources from the 20% of the land that is left to the Palestinians.
Sold down the river
But
it gets worse. Oslo II’s draconian restrictions on water development
imposed by Israel mean that Palestinians can only actually abstract 87
mcm in the West Bank, of the 118 mcm they are allowed.
The
acute water deficit is made up by the supply of piped water from
Israel. Mekarot currently sells the Palestinian Water Authority some 60
mcm per year – at full price.
As reported by Amira Hass in Ha’aretz, “in that agreement Israel imposed a scandalously uneven, humiliating and infuriating division of the water resources”.
While
Palestinian water is piped into Israel at no cost, a fraction of it is
then piped back again, and paid for. In this way Israel is extracting
from Palestinians both their water, and their money.
In some cases Palestinians are forced to pay ten times more
for their water than the price in Tel Aviv – as in the village of
Sussia on South Mount Hebron, where they have to drive to the nearby
town to buy over-priced water (see photo), even though a water main
passes directly through the village on its way to an Israeli settlement.
Water plenty, and water famine
According to the UN Human Rights Council,
this all translates into a wide disparity between water use by
Palestinians and by settlers in the West Bank. Settlers enjoy 400 litres
per capita per day (l/c/d) while some Palestinians surive on a little
as 10 l/c/d.
All
Palestinian populations receive water volumes far below the level
recommended by the World Health Organization of 100 – 250 l/c/d.
According to the UNHRC:
“Settlements
benefit from enough water to run farms and orchards, and for swimming
pools and spas, while Palestinians often struggle to access the minimum
water requirements.
“Some
settlements consume around 400 l/c/d, whereas Palestinian consumption
is 73 l/c/d, and as little as 10-20 l/c/d for Bedouin communities which
depend on expensive and low quality tanker water.”
These
very low levels of water provision fail to meet the water needs of many
Palestinian communities – leaving them with often contaminated water,
and not enough of it.
While Palestinian water use may
just exceed 70 l/c/d in the relatively well served urban centers of the
West Bank, it drops much lower in rural areas that have no access to
piped water and depend on wells and rainwater collection.
An
estimated 113,000 Palestinians in the West Bank have no piped water
supply, while hundreds of thousands more have only intermittent supply,
especially in the summer.
Additional restrictions
The
restrictions and limitations imposed on Palestinians to access their
own resources and develop them have exacerbated the already severe water
shortages among Palestinian communities.
Among
the restrictions are limits on the size of supply pipe, intended to
limit flows as a form of rationing. Typically 30% of the water leaks
from Palestinian supply pipes – because Israel refuses to allow their
renewal
In
‘Area C’, which covers 60% of the area of the West Bank, Palestinian
farmers and communities are not allowed to connect to the water network
that serves the growing settlements – and are forbidden even to dig out
cisterns.
The
international community considers the establishment of Israeli
settlements in the Israeli-occupied territories illegal under
international law, as set out in the report of the fact finding mission of the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.
Yet
the construction of new illegal Israeli settlements and ‘outposts’, and
the expansion of existing ones, is proceeding apace – and further
reducing the quantity of water allocated to Palestinians.
Your water or your life
As reported by the UN in
March 2012, another threat arises from settlers seizing springs by
force: “Palestinians have increasingly lost access to water sources in
the West Bank as a result of the takeover of springs by Israeli
settlers, who have used threats, intimidation and fences to ensure
control of water points close to the settlements.”
The
UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) examined
60 springs on Palestinian land close to Israeli settlements. They found
that:
“In
22 of the water sources, Palestinians have been deterred from accessing
the springs by acts of intimidation, threats and violence perpetrated
by Israeli settlers, while in the eight springs under full settler
control, Palestinian access has been prevented by physical obstacles,
including the fencing of the spring area, and its ‘de facto annexation’
to the settlement.”
Violence
and destruction may also come directly from the occupation
authorities. “Destruction of water infrastructure, including rainwater
cisterns, by Israeli authorities has increased since the beginning of
2010; double in 2012 compared to 2011.
“The
denial of water is used to trigger displacement, particularly in areas
slated for settlement expansion, especially since these communities are
mostly farmers and herders who depend on water for their livelihoods.
“A
number of testimonies highlighted that the cutting off from water
resources often precedes dispossession of lands for new settlement
projects.”
Mekorot – at the heart of Israel’s water apartheid
All
Israeli settlements in the West Bank are connected to piped water
supplied by Israeli water company Mekorot, which took over
responsibility for the water resources of the West Bank from the
occupying forces in 1982.
Thus it Mekarot which is both the on-the-ground enforcer, and the economic beneficiary, of the West Bank’s ‘water apartheid’.
As the UN Human Rights Council
reports: “In the Jordan Valley, deep water drillings by the Israeli
national water company Mekorot and the agro-industrial company Mehadrin
have caused Palestinian wells and springs to dry up. Eighty per cent of
the total water resources drilled in the area is consumed by Israel and
the settlements.”
“The
lack of availability of Palestinian water resources has led to chronic
shortages among Palestinian communities in Area C and a dependence on
Mekorot … Mekorot supplies almost half the water consumed by Palestinian
communities.
Restricted access
The
UNHRC also reported that Palestinians do not have access to the cheaper
‘recycled water’ available to Israeli settlements, and have to buy more
expensive drinking water even for irrigation purposes.
This
injustice and inequity of access to water supply has always been a
source of tension, especially when Palestinian villagers see water pipes
leading to Israeli colonies passing through their land without
supplying their village with water – as reported above at Sussia.
“The
Mission heard of situations where villagers must travel several
kilometres to get water when closer water resources serve neighbouring
settlements”, reported UNHRC.
And
even when they do get water, they receive second class treatment. “In
the event of a water shortage, valves supplying Palestinian communities
are turned off; this does not happen for settlements.
‘Week of Action Against Mekorot’
Mekorot
violates international law and colludes in resource grabbing -including
pillaging water resources in Palestine. It supplies this pillaged water
to illegal Israeli settlements, and engages in systematic
discrimination and denial of water to the Palestinian population.
For this reason Palestinian organizations including PENGON / Friends of the Earth Palestine have co-organised a ‘Stop Mekorot‘ week of action starting today, on World Water Day.
The
campaign aims to intensify pressure on governments and companies to
boycott Mekorot and hold the company accountable for its discriminatory
water policies and practices in Palestine.
On
March 20, the environmental federation Friends of the Earth
International announced its support for the campaign against the
discriminatory practices of Mekorot – joining the global call on
governments, public and private utility companies and investors
worldwide to avoid or terminate all contracts and cooperation agreements with Mekorot.
Campaign successes
In
December 2013 the largest drinking water supplier in the Netherlands,
Vitens, set a precedent when it decided that its commitment to
international law meant it had to withdraw from a cooperation agreement with Mekorot. According to the company:
“Vitens
attaches great importance to integrity and adhering to international
laws and regulations. Following consultation with stakeholders, the
company came to the realization that it is extremely difficult to
continue joint work on projects, as they cannot be separated from the
political environment.”
Mekorot suffered another blow this week when authorities in Buenos Aires, Argentina, suspended a proposed $170m water treatment plant deal.
The
decision followed a campaign by local trade unions and human rights
groups which highlighted Mekorot’s role in Israel’s theft of Palestinian
water resources – and raised the prospect that Mekorot might export its
discriminatory water policies to Argentina.
Palestinians
must have their rightful share of available resources and be granted
full authority to manage them properly. Equitable and wise use of
available resources among all people is the only basis for lasting peace
in the region.
And
until then the deliberate, systematic, purposeful water discrimination
and resource theft carried out in Occupied Palestine by the Occupation
and Mekorot must be recognised for what they are – crimes against
humanity. The perpetrators must be punished accordingly.
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