
Violations
May 8, 2022Israeli Supreme Court, on Wednesday, gave the army the green light to forcibly expel the residents of Masafer Yatta communities in the southern West Bank district of Hebron.

An Israeli court ratifies the displacement of the residents of 8 villages in Masafer Yatta in Hebron
Israeli Supreme Court, on Wednesday, gave the army the green light to forcibly expel the residents of Masafer Yatta communities in the southern West Bank district of Hebron.
Israeli Supreme Court ruled in favor of the forcible displacement of 1,300 Palestinians living in twelve villages or hamlets in Masafer Yatta area, which relies heavily on animals as the main source of livelihood.
The court published the ruling on Wednesday overnight, just ahead of Israel’s so-called “Independence Day”, which witnessed the ethnic cleansing of more than 750,000 indigenous Palestinians and turning them into refugees.
The court’s move leads to the confiscation of over 35,000 dunam of land, where agricultural communities have lived for generations, to consolidate colonial settlement construction in the area.
Located in Area C of the West Bank, under full Israeli administrative and military control, the area has been subjected to repeated Israeli violations by settlers and soldiers targeting their main source of living - livestock.
It has been designated as a closed Israeli military zone for training since 1980s and accordingly referred to as Firing Zone 918.
Israeli violations against the area include demolition of animal barns, homes and residential structures. Issuance of construction permits by Israel to local Palestinians in the area is non-allowed.
Masafer Yatta mayor, Nidal Younes, said that the court has ignored all evidence and facts that were submitted by the families over the last 22 years showing that they have been permanently residing in the area since before 1980s.
The Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem slammed the court ruling as being intended to forcibly transfer hundreds of Palestinians from their homes and destroy their communities. “The justices have thus proved once again that the occupied cannot expect justice from the occupier's court,” it added.
“The decision, weaving baseless legal interpretation with decontextualized facts, makes it clear that there is no crime which the high court justices will not find a way to legitimize. Employing sugarcoated language, hypocrisy, and lies, the justices once again fulfilled their role in Israel’s regime of Jewish supremacy and paved the way for the crime of forcible transfer to be committed, while reversing reality: the ruling cast Palestinian victims as the “unlawful” offenders, while portraying the apartheid regime as the victim.”
It urged the international community to prevent Israel from forcibly transferring the communities and “make sure, should this crime be committed, that those responsible for it – including government ministers, the military top echelons, and the supreme court justices – will be held accountable.”
Meanwhile, the Alliance for Human Rights, a group of activists allied to document human rights abuses in Palestine, launched an online campaign to save the community.