Abu Dis, Ras Abu Sbitan (Olive Terminal), Sheikh Saed, Sun 6.6.10, Morning

Share:
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Email
Observers: 
Anat T., Gal L. (reporting)
Jun-6-2010
|
Morning

6:45  Sheikh Saed

For a long time now the checkpoint has been fairly empty on Sundays.  Checking of documents lasts a reasonable 3 min. average.  We were told that those who register with the DCO may cross at the Sawahara checkpoint with their cars even though they are from Sheikh Saed.  We decided to check this out soon.


 
7:15  Sawahara

Here too an empty checkpoint and bored soldiers.  They don't know of the arrangement with Sheikh Sa'ed residents, and have not encountered such requests.  A more thorough inquiry with the DCO and the commander of the DCO envelope reveals that the matter is being discussed.  The IDF will be constructing a road from Sheikh Sa'ed to Sawahara, and it is not yet clear who will be allowed to cross and where.  Clearly this will take a long time.  And in the meantime? They promised that next week, when a fortnight's worth of discussions is completed, they will inform us.  What a complication for the residents who can simply cross from Sheikh Sa'ed on a paved road with traffic lights.


 
8:00  Silwan

On the heels of repeated complaints from the residents, we have begun to visit Silwan regularly.   The main road (where the Givati parking lot and the main entrance to the City of David site are situated) has become a one-way road, and a no entry sign is posted immediately past the entrance to the parking lot.  The reasons: work on infrastructure on the road, which requires digging and then covering up.  Today there are no traffic jams, no sudden stopping of cars, and all seems calm despite the exaggerated number of BPs (more than ten + a policeman).

We wondered whether these works are intended to upgrade the infrastructure for the settlers (today as well as last week we saw the team working opposite buildings in their possession), or whether they are intended for the benefit of the entire neighbourhood.  We spoke to some of the residents living close to the road and asked them to keep track of the situation and report to us by phone.

From conversations we glean that the situation is bad: every day there are checks and arrests at the top of the road, especially at night, "even midnight".  While here, we saw in the distance a border-police soldier arguing with a kid who stood, so it seems, near a house of settlers.

 
8:45  Zeitim Crossing

This is a calm hour, after all the workmen have crossed. 
The checkpoint is clean and quiet, no shouting on the loudspeakers today.  We watch an elderly woman, accompanied by another woman, walking towards the checkpoint.  Only one lane is open, and no sign of life from the DCO lane where 15 persons are waiting in commendable silence.  Within a few minutes the line grows very long, and we speak to the checkpoint commander who says there was a compluter glitch and they're dealing with it.  Within a few minutes the second corridor opens and the pressure decreases.  Today the turnstile allows several people to cross simultaneously.  There are no arguments, and no one is turned back.

 
9:15  Sheikh Jarrah

 
We arrived for our regular weekly 1/2 hour coffee break with Nasser.  Today is quiet, but the dys are mostly tempestuous and the settlers' violent behaviour continues to escalate.  We spoke of an internet site to explain the struggle.  Unlike the Israeli blogs and Facebook, it would come from the Palestinian side alone.

We part from Nasser and are about to get into our car when we hear cries of "Gal, Gal."  Shlomi, a familir figure from the home of the settlers shouts "We know you, don't worry, we'll deal with you, and reach your home too.  We have your picture" and more in the same style.  I have never spoken to Shlomi, and the information must have been collected along with other details about activists and supporters of the struggle.  

Since there have already been plots against Sheikh Jarrah activists, and the Palestinians have enormous difficulties with complaints to the police (which generally end with their own arrest), we decided to lodge a complaint about threats from the settlers, in the Shalem police-station on Salah-a-Din Street.  To our surprise, the procedure was conducted pleasantly and courteously in a relatively short time.  We have yet to identify photos in the Russian Compound, and then we'll see whether the complaint will be taken care of.