Jericho Palestinians fear isolation in Israeli annexation

When Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu unveiled a map of his plans in September, he pointed to a long blue zone to be annexed, leaving a brown speck in the middle: Jericho. (AFP)
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Updated 24 June 2020
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Jericho Palestinians fear isolation in Israeli annexation

  • Netanyahu said the government could put the annexation plans in motion from July 1
  • Israel has occupied the West Bank since the 1967 Six-Day War and more than 450,000 settlers now live alongside 2.8 million Palestinians

JERICHO, Palestine: Mamoun Jasr has grown hundreds of date palms near Jericho, but now the farmer fears being marooned on a scrap of Palestinian land if Israel forges ahead with its plans to annex the Jordan Valley.
A qualified accountant, Jasr has spent the past decade on an ambitious mission to learn how to cultivate his fields as an “act of resistance” against Israel’s occupation of the West Bank.
His palm grove now boasts 1,300 trees planted near the oasis city of Jericho, home to 20,000 Palestinians.
But the nearby area is also dotted with Israeli settlements, which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says will be annexed along with the fertile Jordan Valley.
When Netanyahu unveiled a map of his plans in September, the premier pointed to a long blue zone to be annexed, leaving a brown speck in the middle: Jericho.
The idea of leaving the city under Palestinian rule, while the surrounding territory becomes Israeli, was also included in a broader US peace plan published in January.
Israel has occupied the West Bank since the 1967 Six-Day War and more than 450,000 settlers now live alongside 2.8 million Palestinians.
Netanyahu said the government could put the annexation plans in motion from July 1, despite vocal opposition from a host of countries and the United Nations.
“Jericho will become an enclave,” said Jasr, inspecting his palm trees as they cast shadows across the plain, worried like many Palestinians that the Israeli proposals will leave him stranded.
The 50-year-old currently divides his time between his office in the city of Qalqilya, in the northern West Bank, and his farmland near the Jordanian border.
“Who knows if I will be able to leave to sell my dates? And who knows if I will be able to return to the ‘island of Jericho’ if I need to go to Qalqilya?” he asked.
The full details of Israel’s annexation plans remain unknown, with some observers predicting that Netanyahu could first annex only a few settlements and hold off initially on the wider Jordan Valley.
Even so, the uncertainty and fears that Jericho will become isolated are unsettling farmers here.
“What will happen to residents whose land is located outside? What type of permit will Israel give them to go and cultivate it?” said Judeh Aseed, from Jericho’s agricultural union.
“If we leave our fields for even one or two days without anyone taking care of them, they will become unworkable,” he added.
The land needs regular irrigation, Aseed said, raising concerns Israel could prevent Palestinian farmers from watering or fertilizing their land.
Jericho’s mayor, Salem Ghrouf, predicated annexation would trigger a “major economic problem” as many residents would lose their work.
“Jericho is the heart of the Jordan Valley and depends on surrounding villages, whose residents come and do their shopping and work,” he said.
For Ghrouf, trying to do a deal to grant Palestinian farmers access to their land after annexation would amount to capitulation to Israel.
“Jericho is part of Palestine and cannot be separated under any circumstances,” he said.
Meanwhile, Jasr remains uneasy and expects Israeli soldiers to arrive on his land imminently — and not for the first time.
Five years ago, he was served an expulsion notice by the Israeli army which claimed his date palms stood on Israeli land.
Jasr challenged the order in Israel’s supreme court and won, but he worries he will be unable to withstand annexation.
“If the army comes back, this time I have no chance,” he said. “I put all my money into this farm and now I’m scared of losing everything.”


Brother of Israel’s Shin Bet chief indicted in Gaza smuggling case

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Brother of Israel’s Shin Bet chief indicted in Gaza smuggling case

JERUSALEM: Prosecutors on Thursday filed charges against the brother of the head of Israel’s domestic intelligence agency over the alleged smuggling of cigarettes into the besieged Gaza Strip.
Bezalel Zini, the brother of Shin Bet chief David Zini, is charged along with other defendants in the case with “assisting the enemy in wartime, performing transactions in property for terrorist purposes, obtaining something by fraud under aggravated circumstances, and taking bribes,” the justice ministry said.
“A central category of prohibited goods smuggled into the Strip was tobacco and cigarettes, which have put a total of hundreds of millions of shekels into Hamas’s coffers since the start of the war,” the ministry added in a statement.
Israel controls the entry of all goods and people into the Palestinian territory, where humanitarian conditions remain dire despite a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas which came into effect on October 10.
The justice ministry described the smuggling operation as a “serious case of organized, systematic, and sophisticated smuggling of various goods into the Gaza Strip for profit,” which began in the summer of 2025, when war was still raging in Gaza.