'}}

Objection to Masterplan Plan No. 256-0773945 -Majdal Shams

August 23, 2023

The current situation in the Syrian villages of the occupied Golan.

Land constitutes a fundamental and essential element in the process of development, construction, and even in the issues of existence and survival. In addition to being an important economic resource, it has a distinct and clear impact on numerous aspects of life.

Before the occupation in 1967, the population of the five villages (Majdal Shams, Masa’ada, Buqa’atha, Ein Quniya, and Ghajar) owned more than 100,000 dunams (one dunam is approximately 1,000 square meters) of land. Over the years, the occupation authorities confiscated 56% of these lands for military and settlement purposes, leaving only 47,000 dunams in the hands of the Syrian village residents.

The lands were a primary source of livelihood for the inhabitants of the Golan Heights villages, where agriculture and livestock farming formed the backbone of the villages’ economy. However, livestock farming gradually disappeared from the economic arena of the residents of the villages, due to the expropriation of pasture lands. Over the years, agriculture has also due to discriminatory policies in the distribution of water resources. Farmers struggled to compete with the agricultural production of the Jewish settlements, which was generously organized, developed, supported, and subsidized by the government, which resulted in the villages losing significant economic resources. In addition, the Golan villages suffer from severe overpopulation. The land policies contributed greatly to limiting urban development, transforming them into underdeveloped population centers.

The approved structural plans emphasize the goal of concentrating the population of the villages in a limited area by imposing vertical (multi-story) construction and limiting horizontal expansion, even though the vertical construction contradicts the residential culture of the
villagers who rely on agriculture for their economy, as they have different social and housing 19 requirements than the residents of the urban areas. The imposition of vertical construction disregards these unique requirements and cultural considerations of rural residents.

In the past, urban expansion in the Golan villages would take place from the inside out, so this expansion towards the outer circles allowed for the preservation of green spaces and open areas between the houses. However, due to the limited urban areas, the Golan villages are
now experiencing a reverse urban expansion process - from the outside to the inside - which has resulted in the loss of open areas and an increase in the density of vertical construction, leading to a phenomenon known as “inverted urbanization”. Also, this process led to perpetuating the housing crisis, transforming it into a worsening crisis, because of planning and programs that ignore the culture and needs of the Arab community in the villages.

The lack of land for construction and programs that meet the needs of the population makes it difficult to obtain building permits, which has led to the worsening of the phenomenon of illegal construction. This phenomenon is the consequence of the lack of effective planning and the
citizens’ need for security and stability, which is inherently tied to their rights to adequate housing. 

Read more: 

 

 

Releated Posts


'}}
Press release regarding the deterioration of the situation in Syria and attacks on civilians
Al Marsad condemns the attack by the Al Nusra front on June 10 against the Druze community in the village of Qalb Luza in Idlib province which resulted in the deaths of 23 civilians including children, and the wounding and enforced disappearance of many others.
'}}
ACTION ALERT: The International Community Must End Israel’s Collective Punishment of the Civilian Population in the Gaza Strip
As international and criminal law scholars, human rights defenders, legal experts and individuals who firmly believe in the rule of law and in the necessity for its respect in times of peace and more so in times of war, we feel the intellectual and moral duty to denounce the grave violations, mystification and disrespect of the most basic principles of the laws of armed conflict and of the fundamental human rights of the entire Palestinian population committed during the ongoing Israeli offensive on the Gaza Strip.
'}}
Israeli Agricultural Settlement Expansion in the Occupied Syrian Golan During the Syrian Conflict
In January 2014, the Israeli cabinet approved a proposal to develop 30,000 dunams (7,400 acres) of land in the Occupied Syrian Golan for agricultural use.
'}}
Oil and natural gas in the Occupied Syrian Golan, illegal exploitation by Israel as occupying power
According to the Law of Occupation, Israel being the occupying country, has the legal obligation to act as just administrator of public property and natural resources. Nevertheless, at the beginning of 2013 Israel's Energy and Water Resources Ministry granted Genie Energy, an American-Israeli company, an exclusive licence to explore for oil and gas in a 153-square miles radius in the southern part of the Golan.
'}}
NEW PUBLICATION: EU’s guidelines on labelling of settlements products, situation in the EU and in some States Parties
Since the occupation began, the Israeli authorities have aimed to implement policies which control the valuable resources in the region, in particular the land and the water.