Just the Facts: Restrictions on Movement
- In 2016, Israeli forces deployed an average of 107 adhoc ‘flying’ checkpoints along West Bank roads each week.
- Between 2000 and 2005, 67 Palestinian mothers were forced to give birth at Israeli military checkpoints. 36 babies died.
- A total of 5,587 flying (temporary) checkpoints were counted on West Bank roads in 2016.
- There are 124 gates at the entrances to villages – 59 of them closed most of the time.
- About 88,000 Palestinians are forced to use detours, two to five times longer, to reach the closest city.
- Most Palestinian farmers must obtain special permits or ‘prior coordination’ to reach their land isolated between the wall and the Green Line.
- Over 400 kilometres of roads are prohibited or highly restricted for Palestinian-plated vehicles.
- Under international law, Israel has the obligation to facilitate the free movement of Palestinians within the oPt, including East Jerusalem.
- The permit regime, wall, and checkpoints have progressively isolated East Jerusalem from the rest of the West Bank.
- 10 percent of pregnant women are delayed at checkpoints while travelling to hospital to give birth.
- In Hebron, Palestinian children living and/or studying in schools in the Old City must walk through up to four Israeli military checkpoints just to reach school.
- Palestinian women passing through the checkpoint system are subjected physical hardship and the constant risk of harassment.
- Palestinian women are delayed for hours (often without food/water), endure verbal or physical abuse, stripped semi-naked, slapped, and worse.
- Checkpoints make it difficult or impossible to transport tools and work materials throughout different areas of occupied al-Khalil, slowing or preventing repairs and the building of infrastructure.
This week’s Just the Facts comes from:
- “Movement and access in the West Bank” from OCHA oPt.
- The “Checkpoint Births” infographic from Visualizing Palestine.
- “Children of the State of Palestine” from UNICEF.
- “The gendered aspect of Israeli checkpoints in the OPT” from Coalition of Women for Peace and Who Profits from the Occupation.
- And the Kumi Now entry from Christian Peacemaker Teams.
Learning More
- Kalandia: A Checkpoint Story, available on on YouTube.
- Rent of buy the documetary Checkpoint by Yoav Shamir on Vimeo.
- There is also a short film called The Present from filmmaker Farah Nabulsi, that you should try to watch. It has just been shortlisted for an Academy Award. You can see a trailer on the film’s website and take a look at the film’s list of festival screenings.
To go deeper, we have an extensive list of Additional Resources at the bottom of this week’s entry and we’re developing a YouTube playlist on the subject.