SETTLERS FILL ANCIENT WELL WITH EARTH AND ROCKS NEAR SALFIT

Photo: Ma'an News Agency
Photo: Ma’an News Agency

Nablus, 11 Shawwal 1436/27 July 2015 (MINA) – Israeli settlers filled up an ancient agricultural well in the West Bank village of Deir Istiya west of Salfit on Saturday, local farmers told Ma’an.

Witnesses said that the settlers filled the well with earth and rocks using “primitive” tools.

Khalid Maali, a researcher on settlement affairs, said that filling up the well is part of a larger plan to forcibly move people from Wadi Qana to clear the way for the expansion of illegal Israeli settlements, Ma’an News Agency quoted by Mi’raj Islamic News Agency (MINA).

Several illegal Israeli settlements surround Deir Istiya, the closest of which are Revava and YaqirI.

Also Read:  LESS THAN 24 HOURS AL-QASSAM KILLS 29 ISRAELI OCCUPATION SOLDIERS

About 17 percent of Deir Istiya’s village territory is classified as Area B, according to the Applied Research Institute of Jerusalem, with the remaining 83 percent Area C, giving Israel full civil and military authority.

ARIJ said in a 2013 report that Deir Istiya “has been subjected to numerous Israeli confiscations for the benefit of various Israeli objectives,” including the construction of settlements, outposts, checkpoints, bypass roads and the Israeli separation wall.

The report said that Israeli settlers living on the village’s land “have had a significant impact on Palestinian residents and their properties.”

Settler attacks have contributed to the loss of Palestinian lands and landowners have been barred from their plots, which have been fenced in with barbed wire and planted with trees, the report said.

Also Read:  Palestine Demands Israeli Metal Detectors in Aqsa Mosque Are Removed

It added: “Israeli settlers have also carried out a series of attacks against Palestinian landowners in an attempt to intimidate them and deter them from returning to their lands.” (T/P010/R04)

Mi’raj Islamic News Agency (MINA)

Comments: 0

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.