PALESTINE
Wed 15 Mar 2023 9:25 pm - Jerusalem Time
Al-Sondas Mountain resists settlement with its loftiness and the clinging of its owners
Hebron - "Jerusalem" dot com - Jihad Al-Qawasmi - Yousry Al-Jamal voluntarily dismantled the fence of his land located on the summit of Mount Sindas , south of the city of Hebron, in the face of attempts to seize it, because of its strategic location, which made it the focus of the occupation and its settlers' ambitions openly, at the expense of the lands citizens and emptying the area, after notifying and threatening the occupation to remove it by force within 96 hours.
Less than two months later
Yamen al-Jamal, the son of the owner of the land, said that the notice of removing the fence around his father’s land that he bought from its original owners in 2001, which has an area of four and a half dunums, after it was a military point on which the occupation soldiers stationed to bomb the city during the Al-Aqsa Intifada, comes less than two months later. The occupation confiscated the contents of the land, after it reclaimed and rehabilitated it, transported the dust to it, surrounded it with walls and barbed wire, and planted its surroundings with trees, for the purpose of establishing a private park and an investment project on the land.
squander the dream
He pointed out that the occupation destroyed and dispelled his father's dream of establishing a project on the land to be a source of income for his family, when the occupation vandalized the park, under the pretext of establishing it without a license, and confiscated (12) plastic capsules (plastic bubble) in the form of domes made of metal fixed to the ground covered with transparent plastic. , for the visitor to use as rooms to rest in, as well as planting plants and flowers, and he also built external bathrooms of bricks, but the occupation asked him to self-demolish them, stressing that his father and the land owners did not stop defending the fever of the mountain, which the occupation aspires to smash and amputate from its geographical drive.
And between the camels, Jabal Al-Sondas enjoys a distinguished strategic location, as it overlooks from its height many surrounding areas, and the occupation places the eye on settlement on it, as it overlooks the so-called "Hagai" settlement, from the western side, about one kilometer away from it, and to the south. From Bypass Street No. (60).
Street transportation scheme
Al-Jamal explained that there is a Judaization scheme for land theft and plans to expand the Hagai settlement, at the expense of the lands and property of the citizens, indicating that the so-called Israeli Land Authority has begun to draw up a plan to move the bypass road between the Hagai settlement and Al-Harayek and change its route into the depth of the lands of the fires, with the intention soon to bulldoze it. Uprooting and vandalizing fruit trees for a bypass road that starts from Hagai roundabout, passing through fires and citizens' lands.
He pointed out that this road will penetrate the lands of the families of Damiri, Miteb, Al-Jabeh, Abu Sharkh, Al-Jamal, Abu Asneneh, Asfour and other families, in addition to many lands belonging to the people of Hebron, all the way to the right belly of Mount Sindas, until reaching the Qalqis Dam roundabout, which means vandalizing and confiscating hundreds of dunums unjustly to please the settlers and their extremists like Ben. Ghafir, Yehuda Glick, and other settler terrorists and their expansionist projects, which aim to Judaize the city of Hebron and its family.
Enticement and intimidation
Amidst al-Jamal’s insistence and adherence to the summit of Mount Sindas, and confronting the aspirations of settlement expansion to take possession of it in various intimidating and enticing ways, he reveals that unimaginable sums of money have been offered to his father to give up the land, but they are rooted in its soil, and he will remain a thorn in the side of settlement and settlers, planted in Our land is like an olive tree, stressing that the occupation will end.
Share your opinion
Al-Sondas Mountain resists settlement with its loftiness and the clinging of its owners