Beit Ur al-Tahta

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Beit Ur al-Tahta
Arabic بيت عور التحت
Name Meaning "Lower house of straw"
Government Municipality
Governorate Ramallah & al-Bireh
Population 4,413 (2006)
Jurisdiction  dunams

Beit Ur al-Tahta (Arabic: بيت عور التحتى‎, lit. Lower house of straw) is a Palestinian town located in the Seam Zone in the central West Bank, in the Ramallah and Al-Bireh Governorate. The village, along with its sister village Beit Ur al-Foqa, is located on the site of the biblical Bethoron. The two villages crown two hilltops, less than two miles apart, with the former some 800 feet higher than the latter. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, in mid-year 2006, Beit Ur at-Tahta had a population of 4,400 inhabitants.[1]

[edit] Legal action

In the 1980s and 1990s, lands belonging to the two villages were confiscated by the Israeli government to construct Highway 443 along the pass of Bethoron, which passes by the villages.[2] A petition challenging the expropriation before the Supreme Court of Israel in September 1983 was rejected by Justice Aharon Barak who ruled that under international law, it is the right of a military government to infringe on property rights if a number of conditions are fulfilled, one of which is that "The step is taken for the benefit of the local population."[2]

Construction of Highway 443 was completed, initially serving as a main approach road linking the 25,000 inhabitants of the two villages (and four others: Beit Sira, Beit Likiyeh, Hirbet al-Masbah, and Tsaffeh) to the major city in the area, Ramallah.[2] However, since the outbreak of the Second Intifada, the Israel Defense Forces have prevented most Palestinian pedestrians and motorists from using the road.[2] The construction of the Israeli West Bank barrier has also closed off access to the old Palestinian road between Ramallah and the villages of Upper and Lower Beit Ur, making what was formerly a five-minute drive, forty-five minutes via a narrow road.[3]

Israeli drivers on the road have been subjected to rock-throwing, firebombing, and shooting attacks,[4][5][6][7] and the Israeli Defense Ministry has said that Highway 443 is open to Palestinians who pass the inspection at the roadblock.[2] An investigation by Haaretz discovered that most of the access roads are usually closed, though occasionally motorists with special permission can use the road.[2]

After a petition to the court was again filed in March of 2007 by the Association for Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI) in the name of the Palestinian villagers who live alongside the road, in June of 2007, the court ordered the Israeli government to explain why Palestinians have been denied access to the section of Highway 443 that connects Jerusalem to Modi'in and why the roadblocks preventing access to the road from Palestinian villages have not been removed.[2]

[edit] References