IMEU Logo
The Institute for Middle East Understanding offers journalists and editors quick access to information about Palestine and the Palestinians, as well as expert sources — both in the U.S. and in the Middle East. Read our Background Briefings. Contact us for story assistance. Sign up for e-briefings.
Institute for Middle East UnderstandingAnalysis
Donate to IMEU
Home
News & Analysis
Commentary
From the MediaLife & Culture
Cuisine
Customs & Traditions
Film
Literature
Performing Arts
Visual Arts
Palestine in Photos
Art & Culture
Business & Economy
Daily Life
People
Politics
Palestinian Americans
Background Briefings
Documents & Reports
Development & Economy
Historical Documents
Human Rights
Politics & Democracy
Misc.
Maps
Links
Media Inquiries
About IMEU
Donate
Contact

Get E-mail News
Journalists & Editors: Sign up for e-mail briefings here.
EDITOR'S PICKS

The essence of the conflict
Ghassan Khatib, Bitterlemons


Palestinian hopes for Obama
Yasser Abed Rabbo, Haaretz


Palestinian unemployment rate soars
Ma'an News


SEARCH
Advanced Search
Home > News & Analysis > Analysis
West Bank barriers keep rising
Griff Witte, The Washington Post, Mar 6, 2008
Print This PageE-mail This PageBookmark This PageIMEU Life and Culture RSS


qalqilia_protest.jpg
A Palestinian child holds a Palestinian flag children during a protest against demolishing a park by Israeli soldiers in the West Bank village of Azzoun near Qalqilia. (Khaleel Reash, Maan Images)
Karim Edwan's skepticism about the U.S.-backed Middle East peace process is rooted in his morning commute.

To travel from his home in this West Bank village to his job as an emergency room doctor, the 35-year-old must take at least two cabs, skirt a barbed-wire fence, climb a dirt mound, talk his way through multiple Israeli checkpoints and remove his shoes for a full-body security check.

Before the obstacles were imposed, the trip to his hospital in the West Bank city of Nablus took 30 minutes. Now it takes two hours.

"It's my daily humiliation," he said.

It's also part of the explanation for why there is little enthusiasm in the West Bank for negotiations with Israel, and why Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas is in a bind over how to proceed.

The hope of Abbas and other participants in the Annapolis peace talks last November was that the Israeli-occupied West Bank would become a model for what negotiations could bring.

They envisioned the residents of Gaza suffering under the radical Islamic group Hamas, which opposes Israel's right to exist and is not participating in the talks. Meanwhile, the West Bank, where Abbas holds sway, would be rewarded with a reduction of the internal barriers that Israel has imposed in the name of security.

Related stories

refugee-girl-gaza-banner_036.jpg



Checkpoints, barbed wire, roadblocks and trenches slice through the territory, cutting areas off from one another and causing economic hardship.

But in the more than three months since the Annapolis talks, more barriers have gone up than have come down.

"There has been no significant improvement in movement or access. And in fact, there's been an increase in the number of physical obstacles since Annapolis," said Allegra Pacheco, head of information and advocacy for the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Jerusalem.

To read the full article, and selections from Gaza-based blogs, please visit The Washington Post.


Print This PageE-mail This PageBookmark This PageIMEU Life and Culture RSS

FEATURES
This is Gaza
Amira Hass, Haaretz
Fair trade breaks ground in Palestine
IMEU
Israel bans press in Gaza
Christian Science Monitor

Home > News & Analysis > Analysis > West Bank barriers keep rising

All content ©2006-2008 Institute for Middle East Understanding

site designed by nigelparry.net