"Only those with IDs from the village can get in. My sister could not come today because she married a man from the town of Saniri, which is on her ID as her place of residence. She cannot even visit the place where she was born," said Youssef, 33.
About 50,000 Palestinians find themselves in the unusual position of living between the Green Line (the Armistice Line of 1949) and Israel's barrier, which Israel says is necessary to keep terrorists out of Israel.
In Azzun Atma, Israeli soldiers lock the gates at 10pm, confining the residents until the gates are unlocked at 6am. It means the 2,000 residents cannot get proper medical treatment in the event of a nighttime emergency. No doctor lives in the village and the health centre is only manned by a visiting doctor six hours a week, Abdelkarim Ayoub, the village council secretary, said.
So far, two women have been forced to give birth in their own homes because they could not get to hospital at night, he said. "These days, about a week before the women are expecting to give birth, they leave the village before 10pm each day and stay with relatives on the other side so an ambulance will be able to take them to hospital," Ayoub said.
The curfew has forced villagers arriving at the gate even a few minutes after 10pm to sleep at relatives' homes, in their cars, or even under trees because the soldiers will not let them in, Youssef said.
And it meant Youssef was not able to be at his grandfather's bedside in hospital in Qalqilya when he died. "He was alone. He died without his family around him."
Israel's barrier |
Photo: Tom Spender/IRIN |
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Palestinians caught on the 'wrong side' of the barrier say their villages have been turned into prisons. "I am going to change the village's welcome sign to 'Welcome to the Prison', because that's what it has been for the past three years," Ayoub said.
On a tour to the occupied Palestinian territories in November, Louise Arbour, the UN's human rights chief, said the International Court of Justice (ICJ) had to decide whether the barrier's massive humanitarian impact on villages such as Azzun Atmeh was justified.
"For those stuck between the Green Line and the barrier there is a clear infringement to their right of movement. Is it justifiable? The ICJ has told Israel that if it stays on the Green Line, it can build what it wants," she told IRIN.
"Here you have one people balancing their right to security against another people's right to freedom."
Now the Israeli government is building a new barrier between the Israeli settlements of Oranit to the east and Sha'are Tiqwe to the west that will leave Azzun Atma completely enclosed.
"We are now surrounded on all four sides," said Ayoub, whose family is among 10 that will live outside the second fence, to the south of the village.
He told IRIN that he had no idea what the fate of these families would be. "No one from Azzun Atmeh is leaving. We all own land and we don't want to lose it. The future is very dark."
Poverty and unemployment now run at about 60 per cent in the village, Ayoub said, and businesses are failing because they cannot bring in labour from outside.
In a statement to IRIN, the Israeli Defense Force said the barrier was an urgent security imperative. It said anyone wanting to visit Azzun Atma could apply to the District Co-ordination Office] for a permit.
In practice, these are very hard to get, Ayoub said, adding that most villagers had not been visited by their relatives since the barrier had gone up.
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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions