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    • News >
      • May 2018
      • April 2018: Threading Peace
      • Nov. 2017: Capitol Hill Briefing to be held in November on Settlement Expansion
      • August 2017: Netanyahu endorses Betar Illit expansion
      • January 2017: Interfaith Muslim Solidarity Dinner
      • June-July 2016 News
      • Feb 2016: Briefing Report & News
      • Feb. 2016: Briefing announcement
      • Nov. 2015: Report on Wadi Foquin
      • Sept. 2015: Children Denied Soccer Field
      • June 2015: Farmland Destroyed in the Village
      • Sept. 2013 Newsletter
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  • Announcement
  • Lee & Price Letter
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  • Lee & Price Letter

About Wadi Foquin: A Village Under Occupation

Wadi Foquin is a village of 1,300 people about 5 miles southwest of Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank. It lies in a rich agricultural valley on the Green Line—the Israel-Palestine border—with the Israeli town of Tzur Hadassa overlooking it on one side and two Israeli-only settlements, Hadar Betar and Betar Illit, on the other side, in Palestinian territory. Betar Illit has a current population of 50,000 and is planned to eventually accommodate 100,000.

Like many other villages in the West Bank, Wadi Foquin is losing generations-old farmland due to settlement construction and extension of Israel’s separation barrier, both illegal under international law. Since 1948, in fact, fully three-quarters of the village’s land has been expropriated by the Israeli government. Dynamiting for settlement construction has also dried up many of the natural springs used for irrigation, and construction debris and raw sewage discharged from Betar Illit have contaminated fields and made them unsuitable for growing.

Village life is further constricted by Israeli military checkpoints and Israeli-only bypass roads, which limit access to markets, jobs, schools, and healthcare facilities. With Israel announcing new land confiscation orders in August 2014, it is becoming more and more difficult to see a future for the village.
Almost all of Wadi Foquin (92.7%) is in Area C, under full Israeli control. Another 7.3% is in Area B, under joint security control.

Photos below by Jakob Schiller, Ata Manasra, Janet Lahr Lewis, and Adel Hroub

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