Impact of the Separation wall on five Palestinian
villages in Qalqilya district
Background to the villages
The neighboring villages of Ras at Tira ( 400 citizens) and Ad Dab’a,(300 citizens) are located 5 km to the east of Qalqilya city. Near by are located three small villages: Wadi ar Rasha ( 150 citizen), Arab Abu Farda ( 100 citizen) and Arab ar Ramadin ( 100 citizen). The three aforementioned residential areas are situated 4 km to the south east of Qalqilya.
The overall number of population is more than 1000 people.
The area of Ras at Tira is 2000 dunum, Ad Daba’ 3000 dunum and Wadi ar Rasha 1000 dunum.
The five villages are blockaded now between the newly established separation wall and the post 1948 borderline. The wall travels about 2 km in the land of Ras at Tira, 1 km in the land of Ad Dab’a and 1 km in the land of Wadi ar Rasha. The total area of land destroyed by the Wall in the five villages is 400 dunum, while the total number of uprooted fruitful trees is 1600.
The Wall has divided the land of those villages into three pieces:
1. The destroyed land where the wall was actually built – 400 dunums;
2. The land located to the east of the Wall – 1500 dunum ;
3. The land separated along with those five villages to the west of the Wall – 4100 dunum.
The Wall has led to boycotting relations between the citizens of those besieged villages and the citizens of the neighboring villages of Kufr Thuluth, Ras Atiya and Habla who descend from the same extended families. Consequently, people on both sides of the Wall are deprived form family visits and from other forms of family interaction. The five besieged villages provide only 1 % of their living needs. The rest should come from neighboring villages on the eastern side of the Wall. For drinking water, the five villages totally depend on buying water by tanks from nearby areas. With the erection of the Wall, the movement of water tanks in and out of those villages has become very difficult if nor impossible. For electricity, the five villages use generators working on fuel which needs constant provision of this material. For education, the five villages have only one basic school in Ad Dab’a. Pupils have to go for neighboring villages located east of the Wall to pursue studies passing daily through “ security gates” for exit or entry. The health situation is no exception since the five villages have no health centers and they are completely dependent on the villages on the other side of the wall.
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