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Bedouin land fight: claim for native title threatens Israel’s racial exclusiveness
Jonathan Cook considers the legal battle of one Bedouin to repossess his ancestral land in the Negev – a battle that could have ramifications for tens of thousands of Bedouin whose land had been stolen long ago as well as for millions of Palestinian refugees scattered across the Middle East.
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| Thursday, September 2,2010 17:31 | |||||||||
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Jonathan Cook considers the legal battle of one Bedouin to repossess his ancestral land in the Negev – a battle that could have ramifications for tens of thousands of Bedouin whose land had been stolen long ago as well as for millions of Palestinian refugees scattered across the Middle East.
Nuri al-Uqbi’s small cinderblock home in a ramshackle neighbourhood of Hura, a Bedouin town in Israel’s Negev desert, hardly looks like the epicentre of a legal struggle that some observers say threatens Israel’s Jewish character. Inside, the 68-year-old Bedouin activist has stacks of bulging folders of tattered and browning documents, many older than the state of Israel itself, that he hopes will overturn decades of harsh government policy towards the Negev’s 180,000 Bedouin. For the past few months, Mr Al-Uqbi has been in court pursuing a case that has pitted his own expert witnesses against those of the state.
Mr Al-Uqbi claims the right to return to a patch of 82 hectares in the Negev, close to the regional capital, Beersheva, that he says has belonged to his family for generations. But as both the government and the judge in the case, Sarah Dovrat, seem to appreciate, much more is at stake. Should Mr Al-Uqbi win his case, tens of thousands of Bedouin, who long ago had their properties confiscated, could be entitled to repossess their agricultural lands or seek enormous sums in compensation.
Mr Al-Uqbi, a father of eight, said that five years ago – after years of challenging the land confiscation with protests and appeals to the authorities – he launched the lengthy legal process that has finally reached the Beersheva court. “I realized that the authorities were simply waiting for me to die. When all the old people are gone, who will be left to come and testify?”
He says Bedouin deeds – though never formally recorded – were recognized by the Ottomans, the British and even early Zionist organizations such as the JNF, which bought land from the Bedouin. A 1921 document from the public records office in London unearthed by Mr Yiftachel shows that Winston Churchill, the colonies minister, signed an agreement with Bedouin in the Beersheva area that exempted them from registering their lands and set up a special tribal court to settle land disputes. Jonathan Cook is a writer and journalist based in Nazareth, Israel. His latest books are Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle East (Pluto Press) and Disappearing Palestine: Israel's Experiments in Human Despair (Zed Books). His website is www.jkcook.net. A version of this article originally appeared in The National, published in Abu Dhabi. The version here is published by permission of Jonathan Cook.source |
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tags: Negev / Palestinian Refugees / IOF / Zionism / Jerusalem / JNF / Jonathan Cook / Hebrew University / Zionist Organizations
Posted in Palestine |
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