MIFTAH
Wednesday, 3 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

It's definitely possible a black cat has passed between the buddies from the Sayeret Matkal special operations unit. It's possible Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu really is angry at Defense Minister Ehud Barak because Barak badmouthed him to the Americans. It's possible Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz and Industry Minister Shalom Simhon have had a candid exchange of views about their bosses.

And maybe the Sayeret twins are reading the headlines about the "crisis" between them and doubling over with laughter. It might not be wise to rule out that Bibi and Barak have sent their poodles (a term copyrighted by Yitzhak Rabin, who called Yossi Beilin "Peres' poodle" ) to bark a few headlines. To bark, not bite.

And all this to distinguish Barak from his twin-in-power, portray him as a moderate leader, get his breakaway party Atzmaut into the Knesset in the next elections and keep him at the Defense Ministry.

The clue indicating that we're dealing with a conspiracy like the short-lived annexation of Kadima to the coalition is hiding in Barak's holiday interview with Israel Hayom. He chose the newspaper closest to Netanyahu's office as the launching pad for his "new diplomatic plan," whose basis is withdrawal from most of the territories, evacuation-compensation for the settlers in the heart of the West Bank and negotiations with the Palestinians on the other core issues.

In the interview, Barak called on Israel to "continue strengthening" Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. He even described Abbas as "definitely a partner." Barak denies that the timing of the interview has anything to do with the tolling of the election bells. "I have been saying these things for 12 years now," he's saying.

For three years Barak has read countless reports about expanding settlements and outposts in the heart of the West Bank, far east of the separation fence. He has read them and kept his mouth shut.

Over that period the defense minister has received dozens of demolition orders for buildings Palestinians put up illegally in Area C after despairing of obtaining a permit. He received them and signed them. The defense minister collaborated with Netanyahu to placate the criminals of Migron and Beit El's Ulpana neighborhood, and to pour millions of shekels into them.

Over that period Barak saw from up close how Netanyahu worked to delegitimize Abbas - just as Barak did to Yasser "no partner" Arafat. He saw this and kept his mouth shut.

And now, quite by chance, when the danger of a conflict with Iran has given way to the danger of early elections, Barak has pulled "a new diplomatic plan" out of his holster. It's a near exact copy of "the constructive separation plan" promoted by Gilead Sher's Blue White Future movement. Sher headed the Prime Minister's Office for part of the time Barak was premier.

All of a sudden Abbas is a partner we have to strengthen. This dove's wings flap to his hymns about upgrading the university center at the settlement of Ariel.

Just as Barak could have expected, Likud rushed to depict him as a fifth columnist. Bibi finished the job by sending his "associates" to dog the defense minister while firing in all directions: accusations that Barak intends to join up with Tzipi Livni, that he sent Simhon to put out feelers to Labor Party chief Shelly Yacimovich and - worst of all - that he dared to publicly question Bibi's "red lines" and sucked up to U.S. President Barack Obama.

So what if on the day after Netanyahu invited Abbas to negotiations, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said the Palestinian president has to go? Unlike the "rift" with Barak, the tales of Lieberman's "subversive" machinations won't move a single undecided vote from Shelly's bloc to Bibi's.

Jenin in Be'er Sheva

A bit over a year ago my colleague Amira Hass reported on a petition to the High Court of Justice claiming that land belonging to Abd al-Khader Qabaha in the northern West Bank had been given to a Civil Administration officer from the settlement of Reihan. In court, the state argued that the land was registered as state land back in the days of Jordanian rule.

Last week an envelope from the State Prosecutor's Office arrived at the office of attorney Tawfiq Jabareen, Qabaha's lawyer. It contained three documents, which have been obtained by Haaretz, including two copies of a document listing the British Mandate's high commissioner as the land's owner. The other document was the registry form for the plot.

To his surprise, Jabareen discovered under the rubric "Land Located in the Area of the Jenin Land Registry Office" that in July 1974 (that is, seven years after the Jordanians left the West Bank ) the land had been registered under the name "the State of Israel."

And that's not all. On the form is a stamp dated August 29, 2011, from the land registry in Be'er Sheva.

In the response sent to the High Court of Justice the attorney wonders: "Since when has the occupied territory become part of the State of Israel?" He notes that state land in the West Bank has always been registered under "the Jordanian Treasury" or "the Kingdom of Jordan," or under the administrator of government property.

Former officers in the Civil Administration who have seen the documents were equally surprised. For the first time they realized that the State of Israel registers in its name a plot that is not a part of the State of Israel. (The declaration "state land" only lets the state use the land. It does not mean it owns the land ).

Nor could they find an explanation for registering land in the northern West Bank in the capital of the Negev, of all places. The Justice Ministry promises that the state will submit its reply within 30 days, as the court has demanded.

It will be interesting to see the explanation it gives for this strange case. Or maybe it will turn out that this isn't an isolated case. Maybe the land registries in Be'er Sheva and, who knows, maybe in Tiberias and Tel Aviv too, are being used to launder Palestinian land.

 
 
Read More...
 
 
By the Same Author
 
Footer
Contact us
Rimawi Bldg, 3rd floor
14 Emil Touma Street,
Al Massayef, Ramallah
Postalcode P6058131

Mailing address:
P.O.Box 69647
Jerusalem
 
 
Palestine
972-2-298 9490/1
972-2-298 9492
info@miftah.org

 
All Rights Reserved © Copyright,MIFTAH 2023
Subscribe to MIFTAH's mailing list
* indicates required