BARCELONA (IPS) — Palestinian villagers drink unsafe agricultural water rather than trusting water provided by an Israeli company, says Buthaina Mizyed, who has worked in Arraneh village near the conflict-laden West Bank city of Jenin.
A Palestinian villager of the Nawajah clan draws water from a well close to the West Bank Jewish settlement of Susia, south of Hebron August 9, 2008. In the stony hills south of Hebron, Palestinian shepherds complain of frequent attacks by militant Israeli settlers encroaching on their land. Israeli troops and police rarely intervene even when they are on the spot, Palestinians and Israeli human rights groups say. So now the victims are pulling out small video cameras to document abuses and spur the authorities to act. Picture taken August 9, 2008. REUTERS/Nayef Hashlamoun |
“We assured them that water from the Al-Jalameh station is being constantly tested and that its quality is definitely better than that of the water from the agricultural wells,” says Mizyed. “But they would not believe us. They said the water could be contaminated in the time gaps between one quality test and another. They would ask us to guarantee water provided by the Israeli company was safe. But of course we could not guarantee.”
Mizyed related this at a daylong event on ‘the inequality of groundwater allocation: the Palestinian-Israeli case’ organized at the IUCN World Conservation Congress in Barcelona on Tuesday.
But the Palestinians’ mistrust is not unfounded, says a report presented at the event by Ayman Rabi, director of the Palestinian Hydrology Group, a non-governmental organization based in Jerusalem.
“Israeli colonies discharge their untreated wastewater into Palestinian land, causing serious pollution threat to water resources,” says Rabi. An engineer by profession, Rabi has worked on several projects funded by the European Commission and NGOs in Europe.
The report found that industrial Israeli colonies in the West Bank are causing serious damage to groundwater sources and polluting land. It underlines the inequalities of water allocation that plague the region.
“The inequalities are so obvious, but unfortunately the media hardly ever take note of these,” Rabi told IPS. “The unequal allocation of a rightful share for Palestinians from their groundwater resources has kept them underdeveloped over the past 60 years.
“In arid environments such as the Middle East, water is considered a major factor for stability and prosperity for all people. For this stability to happen people who live under similar climate and hydrologic conditions must be treated equally in terms of their rights and needs for water.”
Palestinians are allocated no more than 8.2 percent of the total available water resources in the region, while Israel is using 57.1 percent and Jordan 34.7 percent. The amount allocated to Palestinians does not reflect needs, says Rabi.
The study says 44 percent of domestic water Palestinians need is supplied from local sources, while 56 percent is purchased from Israel.
Rabi points out that Israel has over the decades maintained full control over water resources in the occupied Palestinian territory, and refused to allocate the rightful share for Palestinians.
“Israel drilled hundreds of wells next to the Green Line to capture all the water coming from the Western Aquifer Basin,” the study says.
A mother explains the effect of the wall in the lives of her children. Since the erection of the wall, many women have been forced to get married rather than continue their education. Many others have been separated from their husbands who work on the other side of the Green Line. |
According to the study, “Israel continued to confiscate more land for building settlements to control recharge areas.”
The number of settlers increased from 20,000 in the 1970s to 230,000 in the 1990s. And with this, their water needs.
Rabi warns that while the demand for water continues to increase, driven by population growth and economic development, the Middle East could be the first region to cope with a dramatically reduced amount of water.
The situation is already alarming. Salinity is rising in major water courses such as the Euphrates, and half the population of the region’s large cities lacks adequate drinking water supply.
But what if the countries in the Middle East had no choice but to get along in order to share the region’s meagre water resources?
This is the starting premise of Jon Martin Trondalen’s book ‘Water and Peace for the People’ launched last month at the United Nations Educational and Scientific Organization (UNESCO) headquarters in Paris.
The book suggests concrete ways to resolve these crises. Analyzing what is at stake in each situation while making public new information, the author examines the conflicts over the Upper Jordan River between Israel and Syria around the Golan Heights, between Israel and Lebanon over the Wazzani Spring, and the longstanding water dispute between Palestinians and Israelis. Challenges confronting Turkey, Syria and Iraq in sharing water of the Euphrates and Tigris Rivers are also assessed.
Leave a Reply