Hundreds of olive trees were destroyed yesterday by fires that broke out on Palestinian land cut off by the Apartheid Wall.
The villages of Azun, Izbit Tabib and Nabi Ilyas lost several hundred dunums of land to the blaze, which local people suspect may have been started deliberately by Jewish settlers.
Four hundred dunums were burnt in Azun alone. The Mayor of Azun said: “Yesterday at around one in the afternoon, people saw smoke coming up over the wall in the north of the village, just a few kilometers from Zufin.
“People gathered by the gate in the wall, but were prevented from going to put out the fire by Occupation soldiers who told them that they had to have permission to enter. After half an hour’s protest, the people were finally let through the gates.
“Firemen were able to tackle the blaze close to the wall, but were prevented from reaching the rest of the fire because of landmines littering the area left over from the previous Jordanian presence. There were seven explosions as firemen tried to get close to put out the flames.”
In Izbit Tabib, around three hundred and ninety olive trees were completely destroyed, including forty four that were bearing fruit.
Musa Tabib, a local activist for the Popular Committee Against the Wall, said: “It is likely that the fire was started on purpose by settlers from Zufin settlement or by the soldiers.
“This land is closed off by what the Occupation call a ‘seasonal gate’ which means that people are only allowed to access the olive trees at harvest time. People last had access to this land at the last olive harvest.
“The soldiers and Occupation authorities must bear responsibility for this fire. Because Palestinians are denied access to the land, it is heavily overgrown which allowed the flames to spread quickly.
“Hundreds of farmers have lost their remaining income for this season.”
Farmers whose land is cut off by the Wall require a permit and proof of ownership which must be shown every time they wish to access their land. Even if they have the appropriate documentation, soldiers sometimes deny access citing ‘security reasons’.
Every year for the last three years olive trees cut off by the Wall have been hit by serious fires in the run-up to the harvest. On the fifth of August this year, three thousand olive trees bearing fruit were completely destroyed in Far’un, South Tulkarm, by two fires in the in space of twenty four hours.
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