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World Mena

COVID-19: Palestinians fear outbreak in Jerusalem’s ‘no man’s land’

‘No one can control those people and put them into quarantine’



In this Tuesday, April 28, 2020 photo, a Palestinian vendor displays his vegetables in the street as the main vegetable market remains closed, part of lockdown and quarantine measures to protect residents from the coronavirus, in the West Bank village of Kufr Aqab. As the coronavirus pandemic gathered strength in April, community leaders in Kufr Aqab, a Palestinian neighbourhood on the outskirts of occupied Jerusalem, tried to impose lockdown and quarantine measures to protect residents.
Image Credit: AP

Occupied Jerusalem: As the coronavirus pandemic gathered strength last month, community leaders in a Palestinian neighbourhood on the outskirts of occupied Jerusalem tried to impose lockdown and quarantine measures to protect residents.

The problem: there were no police to enforce the measures.

Kufr Aqab is within the Israeli-drawn municipal boundary of occupied Jerusalem, which the Israeli regime views as its unified capital. It is therefore off-limits to the Palestinian National Authority, which is headquartered in the nearby city of Ramallah and governs parts of the occupied West Bank.

But the neighbourhood is on the opposite side of the wall Israel built in the mid-2000s, so the Israeli occupation police don’t go there either.

“This is no man’s land,” said Mayor Raed Hamdan.

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When the neighbourhood council set up checkpoints to restrict movement in or out, it had to rely on local volunteers. When it ordered businesses to close and people to stay home, they refused.

Now the town has at least 21 confirmed coronavirus cases, according to Sameh Abu Rumaila, the head of a local health committee that, like everything else, is run by volunteers. The committee estimates that another 500 people in the densely populated neighbourhood have been in contact with those who were infected, but is powerless to isolate them.

“No one can control those people and put them into quarantine,” he said. Most have occupied Jerusalem residency, allowing them to travel more or less freely in the West Bank, occupied Jerusalem and Israel. Rumaila says the town is a “ticking bomb”.

Contagious

The virus causes mild to moderate flu-like symptoms in most patients, who recover within a few weeks. But it is highly contagious and can cause severe illness or death, particularly in older individuals or those with underlying health problems.

Israel has reported more than 16,200 cases and at least 235 deaths, while the PNA has reported more than 330 cases and two fatalities. Both imposed heavy restrictions several weeks ago to contain the outbreak, and are now starting to lift them as the rate of new infections slows.

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But an estimated 120,000 people live in Kufr Aqab and other similarly ungoverned areas on the outskirts of the city. That could give rise to new outbreaks.

Officials from the occupied Jerusalem municipality did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

Haneen, an 18-year-old resident, tested positive on April 19, along with her mother and four sisters. Her mother and one of her sisters have been hospitalised, while the others were quarantined in a hotel in Ramallah. She declined to give her last name out of privacy concerns.

Everything is open

Haneen and the sister who is hospitalised work inside Israel, but they were home during the two-week-long Passover holiday in early April, when much of Israel was shut down. They believe they were infected in Kufr Aqab.

“The town is open, all the shops are open, and we all go out and buy from the shops and contact other people,” she said. “There are no police to impose law and order, only local volunteers blocking the roads to Ramallah and [occupied] Jerusalem.”

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“They let you pass if you argue with them,” she said.

The volunteers have reason to be wary. In March, an argument at a checkpoint near Kufr Aqab led to an exchange of gunfire. Israel allowed Palestinian security forces to enter and restore order, but then they had to withdraw.

Israel captured east Jerusalem in the 1967 war and annexed it in a move not recognised internationally. It unilaterally expanded the city’s borders to take in large tracts of land - where it later built Jewish colonies - as well as areas like Kufr Aqab, which at the time were small Palestinian villages.

The Palestinians, who want east Jerusalem to be the capital of their future state, view the separation wall as part of a larger plan to cut them off from the city and change its demographics.

Redrawing boundaries

Aviv Tatarsky, a researcher for Ir Amim, an Israeli rights group focused on occupied Jerusalem, said Israel appears to be planning to redraw the city’s boundaries to exclude Kufr Aqab and other peripheral communities. That would reduce occupied Jerusalem’s Palestinian population by more than a third, from around 330,000 to just 200,000.

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President Donald Trump’s Middle East plan, which Israel has eagerly embraced and the Palestinians have rejected, would also remove those neighbourhoods from occupied Jerusalem.

“Israel built the separation [wall] in a way that disconnects Kufr Aqab, with an explicit intention to get rid of Palestinians from [occupied] Jerusalem,” he said.

Kufr Aqab and other nearby neighbourhoods have been plagued by a lack of law and order since the wall went up. Criminal gangs enjoy free reign, and the lax enforcement of building codes has led to the rapid construction of apartment towers - some up to 18 stories high - that many fear are unsafe.

“We live in great anxiety here,’’ Naela Namour, a housewife and mother of two, said. People in the apartment towers pack into elevators, their children play together in small vacant lots and the local markets are as busy as ever.

“There are no rules,” she said. “People move, work, buy and sell without any restrictions.”

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