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June 2: Supreme Court to hear Negev Bedouin land claim case

Nuri al-Ukbi : We ask the court to redress the injustice of our 1951 expulsion
Att. Michael Sfard : We will challenge legal doctrine used to dispossess Bedouin
Press Release June 1, 2014
Today, Monday June 2, 2014, at 9 am, the Supreme Court in Jerusalem will hear
the appeal of the heirs of Sheikh Suleiman Al-Ukbi regarding the right of
ownership of land at Al Araqib and Zazhilika, northwest of Be`er Sheba. The
panel including Justices Elyahim Rubinstein , Esther Hayut and Salim Jubran will
deliberate on an appeal of the ruling of Judge Sarah Dovrat of the Be`er Sheba
District Court , who had ruled against the heirs.
Nuri al-Ukbi , a veteran Bedouin rights campaigner who is one of the appellants
, said : `In 1951, members of my tribe were expelled from their village and
lands in Al Araqib , and deported by force to Hora, about twenty kilometers to
the east, close to the then border with Jordan. The authorities in the State of
Israel used methods of intimidation and fraud in order to justify the criminal
deportation of civilians from their homes and lands.
Documents and written history prove that Araqib was a place of residence and
cultivated land of the al-Ukbi Tribe for generations , ever since the days of
the Ottoman Empire , and they still lived there during the first four years
after the establishment of Israel. As a citizen of Israel, Sheikh Suleiman
Muhammad al-Ukbi voted in the first elections to the Israeli Knesset
(Parliament) in 1949 , the ballot box being placed at his residence in El
Araqib. The same residence served every Monday and Thursday as the venue for a
Tribal Court, acting under authorization of the State of Israel and sitting with
it National Flag and State Emblem displayed. Then, the state suddenly turned on
its Bedouin citizens and violated their basic rights, solely because of their
ethnicity, and in 1951 expelled them mercilessly from their land. We have
appealed to the Be`er Sheva District Court, seeking justice - and were rejected.
We hope that the Supreme Court will now redress this long-lasting injustice.”
Attorney Michael Sfard, who represents the appellants , said : ` For the first
time was joined together a team of experts on Geography , Judicial History and
International Law to challenge the legal doctrine by which the State of Israel
for decades dispossessed the Negev Bedouin and denied their land rights. has
The appellants seek to overturn a precedent set in the early 1980’s, under which
the determination regarding Bedouin rights is made by examining the Negev
situation in the Nineteenth Century and relying extensively on travelogues
published by European missionaries, who asserted that at that time there were no
fixed Bedouin abodes and that the Bedouins maintained no agriculture in the
Negev. These were momentary ans superficial guests from another continent ,who
judged what was and was not “an agricultural settlement” by European standards.
They failed to notice that the people which they saw were living on the land,
maintaining agriculture under the harsh conditions of an arid region and with
endless struggle making use of every drop of water available to them.
As part of a research conducted on behalf of the appellants , there were
submitted to the Be`er Sheva District Court dozens of documents found at
archives in Israel and abroad - indicating that the precedent set in the
eighties was based both on a judicial error and on an incorrect analysis of the
reality of the Negev in the Nineteenth Century . However, Judge Dovrat in the
District Court preferred to cling to the precedent and ignored the innovative
facts presented to her. Now the Supreme Court will have to deliberate on the
issue.
A central argument brought by the appellants is that the state practices a
blatant double standard: On the one hand, it does not recognize Bedouin land
ownership in the Negev; on the other, it does recognize the land deeds in
transactions when Zionist organizations bought Bedouin land at Ottoman British
Mandatory times. At the time, naturally, Zionist bodies such as the JNF and
Hachsharat Ha’Yishuv did recognize the rights of the Bedouin sellers over the
land, and paid an appropriate price for their land.
Importance of the deliberations goes beyond the specific question of ownership
in the lands of Araqib Village, which in recent years has become a symbol .
Success of the appellants can also affect hundreds of other land disputes
between the state and the Bedouin, and might even impact the status of the
government’s `Prawer Plan`, which assumes that the Bedouin of the Negev have no
land ownership rights.
Contact:
Nuri al-Ukbi : +972-(0)54-5465556
Attorney Michael Sfard : +972-(0)54-4713930
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