Saturday, November 10, 2018

    



Palestinians who live in the Gheith and a-Salameih neighborhoods, as
well as in other neighborhoods in Hebron, are subjected to extreme
restrictions on their freedom of movement, as B’Tselem has documented
many times. The military built a fence along the main street of these
neighborhoods to keep residents out and leave the street open to
settlers only.

Although the military promised it would keep the gate in the fence open
from 6:00 A.M. to 22:00
P.M., it has failed to do so and the gate often remains locked
throughout the day.

To get out of the area when the gate is closed, residents have to take a
roundabout route that is 500 meters long and includes many flights of
steps. When neighborhood children find the gate locked on their way to
school or back home, they often scale the fence rather than take the
long route.

Israel has been implementing a segregation policy in Hebron for more
than twenty years, largely by installing permanent checkpoints
throughout the center of the Old City and around al-Haram al-Ibrahimi
(the Tomb of the Patriarchs) – an area less than 80 hectares wide. These
checkpoints make daily life a nightmare for Palestinian residents there
and in other parts of Hebron.

This unceasing harassment and restriction of movement prevents
Palestinian residents of Area H2 from leading a reasonable routine and
makes daily reality intolerable. By implementing this policy, the
Israeli authorities are promoting the ongoing transfer of Palestinians
from the center of

Hebron.

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