The Valley
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Originally published | 1983 |
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Authors | Rolando Hinojosa |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2431304 |
About The Valley
Essex pylon corridor compensation plan 'insulting'
... " We have amazing views of The Valley and the pylons will be within 100m (328ft) [of our garden]...
The last of their kind: The unique life of Pakistan's Wakhi shepherdesses
... Afroze, who is now 67, remembers becoming the first woman in The Valley to get a pair of shoes...
Pakistan's Kalash people are afraid for their future after Taliban attack
... It felt like a war zone, " says Shaira, a mother of two, as she recalls hundreds of troops, military vehicles, drones and attack helicopters hovering over The Valley...
Climate change: The villagers building 100ft ice towers
... He told me that on a drive through The Valleys in 2013 he noticed a large mound of unmelted ice under a bridge, sheltered from the sun...
Divided communities in the occupied West Bank
... West Bank tensionsIn Arab villages back across The Valley, there are very different catalysts for mistrust - Israel s security crackdown has not only involved extra checkpoints...
Sikkim India floods: 'I was holding mum's hand but the water separated us'
... Experts say the water from the South Lhonak lake cascaded down The Valley and overflowed the Teesta river, leaving a trail of death and destruction in its wake...
Portugal's Barroso lithium mine project faces villagers' ire
... " It would destroy everything, " says Aida Fernandes, as she looks across The Valley where four opencast pits would border the village of Covas do Barroso in northern Portugal...
Wales' 20mph speed limit: How has the first month gone?
... " Further up The Valley between Treorchy and Treherbert, parents and grandparents on the school run have mixed views...
Divided communities in the occupied West Bank
By Joe InwoodBBC Newsnight International Correspondent, Bethlehem and Efrat
On a hillside overlooking Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank , three young Palestinian men are engaged in a scene that could be from biblical times. Working with practised speed, they strip olives from a laden tree. The ripe fruit falls to the ground in glistening piles.
But, this is new work for Ahmed. Before 7 October he worked on Israeli construction sites, making around 400 shekels (£85; $105) A Day . After the attacks of 7 October, almost all Arab access to Israel was banned.
Ahmed, like many Others , lost his livelihood.
" There 's no [decent] work now, " he tells me as he strips the branches clean.
" I work One Day here, One Day There - in The Fields , picking olives. I need to feed My Family . What can I do? "
Israel 's intense security crackdown in the West Bank has not only affected Ahmed economically. Checkpoints, already a source of huge resentment, have imposed even greater restrictions on his freedom of movement.
" They have closed roads. I can only walk around my home now. These checkpoints are suffocating us. "
The same security crackdown that Ahmed criticises is welcomed by people like Danny Chesterman. A cheerful man who used to run bike tours, he lives in The Settlement of Efrat. He moved to Israel decades ago, but has retained his London accent.
" We have not stolen anyone's land, " he replies, when I challenge him on the legality of Israeli settlements in the West Bank .
" We Are people that go to work in The Morning . We run businesses. We have professors at university. We Are people of The Book and not of The Sword . "
Settlement controversyThere was international controversy at the start of the year, when the government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu legalised nine settlements in the West Bank .
The UN and many countries say all settlements are illegal under International Law . It is something many Israelis, especially those living in the settlements, vehemently dispute.
One thing few people would disagree on is that The Events of 7 October, as well as Israel 's military response, have soured relations between Jewish settlers and their Arab neighbours.
" I hope and I believe that the relations with our immediate neighbours here in the Arab villages will continue to be good, " Danny tells me.
" Having said that, obviously There are security concerns. "
On The Morning of 7 October, Hamas - proscribed as a terrorist organisation by the UK and many Others - launched an unprecedented assault on Israel . Around 1,400 people died and around 240 Others were taken hostage.
In response Israel launched air strikes on Gaza, and its troops have since entered The Enclave . Israel says it will not rest until Hamas is destroyed. So Far , the military campaign is thought to have left More Than 10,800 people dead, including 4,400 children.
The fact that Hamas attackers reportedly had help from Gazans who worked with Israelis has fundamentally altered The Way Danny, along with much of Israeli society, seem to think about their Arab neighbours.
" There were instances near the Gaza Strip of kibbutzim (rural communities) where they had a fantastic relationship with Arabs working There and later discovered maps describing The Village with The Names of the families, " he claims.
" Really Terrible Things that they discovered from people who they believe they had excellent relationships with. "
It is a sentiment echoed by Oded Rivivi. He has been mayor of Efrat for More Than a decade, and insists that while relations between his settlement and most of the nearby Arab villages had always been good, they have fundamentally changed, for now at least.
" How long will it take to overcome it? Only time Will Tell . But as long as you don't hear Arab leaders going out and condemning (Hamas ). . it's definitely Making It take longer for that trust to be rebuilt, " he says.
West Bank tensionsIn Arab villages back across The Valley , There are very different catalysts for Mistrust - Israel 's security crackdown has not only involved extra checkpoints. In The Last month, the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) have arrested More Than 1,400 Palestinians. They claim most were connected to Hamas .
Just on The Day We Are filming, the Palestinian Authority says 18 people were killed in the West Bank , taking the total to 170 in just over a month.
It has been met with Palestinian protest, both violent and peaceful. In Bethlehem, for example, shopkeepers held a general strike. While much of The Anger has come as a consequence of what is happening in Gaza, the West Bank was already a tinderbox before 7 October.
Settler violence has been a particular source of rage. Young Israeli men, often well-armed, are accused of forcing Palestinian families from their homes. One video showed a Palestinian man being shot in the leg by a settler armed with an assault rifle.
Back in Efrat, I challenge Mayor Oded over those concerns.
" There is a small group of extremists that do act violently, " he tells me, " and Those People need to be dealt with by The Police … [but] the vast majority of people, Jewish People who live here, deserve security, deserve to be treated like human beings… because that's the nature of these communities".
He insists action will be taken.
" Last Night we had a meeting with the Prime Minister , all of the mayors. There was a consensus calling for the government to make sure that these extremists get arrested, get stopped, and the quicker it happens, the less damage it will do. "
In The End , all these conflicts come down to land. Two groups of people both firmly believe in their right to possibly The Most contested piece of land on earth. For decades, The International call has been for a " Two-State Solution" with the West Bank and Gaza Making Up an independent Palestinian nation, with East Jerusalem as its capital.
More on Israel -Gaza warOver recent years it has seemed an ever less likely prospect. The Coalition government of Prime Minister Netanyahu, propped up by far right settler parties, made compromise look all but impossible. Events of 7 October are seen by many as The Final nail in The Coffin of the two state dream.
" I think Every Day that passes We Are going further away from that, " Mayor Oded says. " Israel actually evacuated all its citizens, all its civilian presence, all its military presence from the Gaza Strip Under Pressure from The International community. And what we got was a military army of Hamas . "
Of course, that suggestion will be met with fury, not to mention resistance, by many Palestinians. For them, as well as much of The International community, the Two State solution is the only one that is acceptable. They say Anything Else is predicated on the basis of the continued denial of rights and freedoms for millions of ordinary Palestinians.
Back at the olive grove, just as The Sun is dipping below The Church of The Nativity , I ask Ahmed what he is looking for in his future.
" Peace and security, " comes his response. " To come and go with our cars, to see Our Children , To Live in Our Country without problems… We're not looking for problems. We're looking to be able to feed Our Children , that's all. "
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com