close
Zionist security forces stand near camels as they demolish the bedouin community of Wadi al-Khalil comprised of 300 individuals in the southern Negev desert near the town of Hura on May 8, 2024. - AFP
Zionist security forces stand near camels as they demolish the bedouin community of Wadi al-Khalil comprised of 300 individuals in the southern Negev desert near the town of Hura on May 8, 2024. - AFP

Zionists destroy bedouin homes in Negev desert

NEGEV: Zionist authorities destroyed around 50 homes belonging to bedouins in the Negev desert on Wednesday, an AFP journalist reported, with the Zionist entity’s far-right national security minister saying they were “illegal constructions”. Bulldozers flattened the houses in the Wadi al-Khalil village, sparking anger among members of its 500-strong community.

“There are more than 500 people here. (Now) the children and the women have nowhere else to go,” said resident Sleiman Abu Asa. “They are demolishing our homes, leaving us stranded outside,” he added as police were deployed to monitor the operation. “We don’t deserve this. We’ve sought a solution for years, hoping for a fair resolution, yet the state has obstructed all our options.”

The Zionist entity considers the homes built in Wadi al-Khalil to be illegal. Far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir reiterated this in remarks posted online Wednesday. The Wadi al-Khalil homes are “illegal constructions”, he said, warning anyone who “violates the law in the Negev” desert. The destruction, he said, was “an important step” indicating the government’s authority would not be challenged. “The police will fight anyone who seizes land and tries to build another reality on the ground,” said Ben Gvir.

Before the Zionist entity’s creation in 1948, the Negev desert was home to approximately 92,000 bedouins. But only 11,000 remained within the Zionist entity’s borders after the 1948 Arab-Zionist War, according to Adalah, an advocacy group for Arab minorities in the Zionist entity. Many of them refused to be resettled in the cities, and bedouins have continued to face difficulties in Zionist society ever since.

Today there are around 300,000, half of whom live in cities and half in villages not recognized by the Zionist entity, according to Adalah. These villages lack most basic services, such as garbage collection. According to Arab activist Taleb El-Sana, a total of 48 homes were flattened by Zionist bulldozers on Wednesday, “leaving children and women homeless”.

“An entire village was wiped out just because its inhabitants are Arab” and “under the pretext of unlicensed construction”, he said. According to Sana, the Zionist entity “doesn’t allow (bedouin) citizens to obtain building permits and then “demolishes their homes under the pretext of a lack of permits”. “We don’t deserve this,” said Abu Asa. “We have sought a solution for years, hoping for a fair resolution but the state has obstructed all our options,” he added. – AFP

Syria holds cherished memories for many Kuwaitis, having once been a favored destination for Gulf families during the 1950s and 1960s. The Levant, with Damascus at its heart, stood as a beacon of culture, history and Arab unity. Its decline under th...
Propaganda is among the most powerful tools used by nations. It influences the masses, provides them with material to feed on, and becomes especially critical during times of war—whether to unify internal ranks or to demoralize the enemy. But toda...
MORE STORIES