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Israeli forces impose ‘collective punishment’ on West Bank village

After two Yatta residents kill four Israelis in Tel Aviv, Israeli security forces besiege village in 'worst' blockade in months, mayor says
Palestinians lead goats past Israeli blockade at Yatta border on Friday (AFP)

YATTA VILLAGE, West Bank - Stacks of cement slabs block every entrance to this village in the southern occupied West Bank district of Hebron. Israeli soldiers began blockading the town during the early hours of Thursday, after a mass shooting in Tel Aviv committed by two Palestinian residents of the town.

Four Israelis were killed in the attack and 16 wounded. While both Palestinian gunmen were captured, Israeli forces still closed off Yatta, home to about 65,000 Palestinians.

Israeli authorities also revoked travel permits granted to 83,000 Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza Strip for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, and announced that all attempting to enter Israel from the occupied West Bank would be barred until Sunday at midnight, with exceptions only for “medical and humanitarian cases".

By Thursday afternoon, less than 24 hours after the attack, the entire town was sealed, with all roads leading in and out closed off.

Issa Shatay, 18, works at his family’s market, adjacent to one of the closed entrances. While the market was booming with customers during the first few days of Ramadan, on Thursday residents were too scared to venture out to the market, where Israeli soldiers were stationed on the other side of the cement blocks.

“They came and put the blocks here around two in the morning yesterday, and after that, there was no business,” Shatay told Middle East Eye, as a handful of workers passed by on foot.

Issa Shatay, 18, works at his family's market in Yatta (MEE/Sheren Khalel)
The workers, just getting off long shifts at blue-collar labour jobs would normally get dropped off in front of their homes, but instead they now walk with bags of tools and clothes in the afternoon heat, all of them fasting for Ramadan.

“The other side of those blocks is still technically Yatta,” one of the men pointed out. “We were dropped off at another blockade on the other side of those homes. It’s not fair but that is the occupation for you.”

When asked if they want the blockade lifted, they laughed. “This is the life,” another man said with a shrug.

The blockade may be business as usual in the occupied West Bank, where dozens of villages have been besieged since the beginning of the upheaval last October, but it may also "be prosecutable as a war crime", according to Simon Reynolds, legal advocacy coordinator at Bethlehem-based Badil Resource Center for Palestinian Residency and Refugee Rights.

“Israel’s application of sanctions against the entire population of Yatta in response to acts allegedly conducted by two residents is not only morally reprehensible, but also entirely unlawful,” Reynolds told MEE. “The prohibition on collective punishment is strict and unequivocal under international humanitarian law.”

MEE contacted an Israeli security forces spokesperson on Friday for response to Reynolds' comments, but had not received any by the time of publication.

On Friday morning, there was one dusty farm path still available to those willing to take the risk, but by midday Israeli soldiers had blocked the last lifeline to the outside world.

House raids 

Since the siege of Yatta began, Israeli forces have also raided homes and detained dozens of young men.

Rusayda Zayn, 53, said Israeli forces came for her son on Thursday night. Younis Zayn, 21, was wanted for being friends and neighbours with Khalid Makhamera, one of the Tel Aviv gunmen.

Rusayda Zayn said Israeli forces came for her son in the night (MEE/Sheren Khalel)
“The soldiers came in all at once, I don’t know how many - more than the hair I have on my head,” she said. “They were everywhere, maybe 300 inside this building and more outside.”

Israeli soldiers reportedly gathered all seven male residents of the building, handcuffing them and laying them on their stomachs in the street outside her home while other soldiers ransacked each room in the building, Zayn said.

Every door in the three-story building had been kicked in or broken.

“The soldiers didn’t knock, they didn’t tell us what they wanted or announce themselves, they just descended on the house all at once," she said. "The doors are all broken because we didn’t have time to realise they were here and open them before they broke them all.”

Because her son was not home that night, Zayn said Israeli forces detained three other men, holding them until Younis turned himself in a few hours later.

“They held the others hostage until my son was contacted,” Zayn said.

A few houses away, the mother of 22-year-old Khalid Makhamera, one of the shooting suspects, along with his cousin, Mohammed Makhamera, 21, sat in a room, as if in mourning, with a dozen other older women.

“I spoke with him last around two in the afternoon before it happened,” his mother said, referring to the shooting. “He said he would be late for dinner and that he was sorry but not to worry, and after that when I tried to call, his phone was off. We found out what happened from the news.”

Khalid’s mother said her son and his cousin were not affiliated with any political group.

On Thursday afternoon, Israeli forces came to the homes of both Khalid and Mohammed and took measurements for home demolitions. Four other families also live in the home where Khalid lived, and will consequently have their homes destroyed as well as part of the punitive demolition. 

“I don’t care about any of that,” Khalid’s mother said. “I am just worried for Khalid, I wish they would have killed him instead of imprisoning him, he will die 100 deaths every day in their prison, it is more painful than death.”

Worst blockade in months

The mayor of Yatta, Mousa Makhamera, who shares a last name but not family relations with the two shooters, told MEE that the blockade of his village is the worst the West Bank has seen in recent months.

“With it being Ramadan and time for kids to take their final exams, this siege is affecting our most vulnerable residents physically and psychologically,” Makhamera said.

“There are kids inside the village who go to school outside, and kids outside the village who go to school here, and now so many of them are missing their final exams, which the older ones have been studying so hard for.”

Mousa Makhamera, the mayor of Yatta (MEE/Sheren Khalel)
“This siege on Yatta is not affecting only residents,” the mayor said. “Yatta is a large town, we supply the surrounding smaller villages with schools and hospitals and markets and all their everyday needs. I’m talking about thousands of other people, it’s not just the residents of Yatta, but all of southern Hebron that is being punished for the acts of two young men.”

The mayor said local people did not blame Khalid and Mohammed Makhamera for their hardships.

“It seems the majority of the young people who are committing these attacks are apolitical, bright Palestinian youths,” he said.

“But they have no hope, no future, they see the dire situation of their parents and elders and they see how long this occupation has continued without hope for a political solution and they are questioning if they have any future at all and they are angry. Collective punishments like this blockade are only encouraging this thought process and making things worse.”

“The only way to end the violence is to end the occupation,” he said. “It is the occupation that is at fault; there is no other way to end this.”

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