Legal Issues Relating to the Bedouin in Israel Flashcards
What is the current Bedouin population in Israel?
About 240,500 (with over 50 percent below the age of 18).
Describe the Bedouin lifestyle.
Nomadic and semi-nomadic lifestyle — many live mainly off agriculture and grazing the land. Polygamy is not uncommon. Women marry at a relatively young age.
Describe the socioeconomic situation of the Bedouin population.
Very poor; lowest in the country.
How did the Bedouins live until the 1900s?
Until the 1900s, the Bedouin of the Middle East, including those of the Negev, were livestock-raising nomads whose movements were dictated by a constant search for pasture and water.
What segment of the Bedouin population is the subject of controversy in Israel?
The 100,000 or so that live in “unrecognized villages.” Most of the Bedouins who claim ownership over and reside on their ancestral lands have remained in these villages, refusing to relocate to the state planned towns. Illegal construction is widespread — approximately 50,000 to 60,000 unauthorized building structures.
Are Bedouins Israeli citizens?
Those that remained in Israel during the Declaration of Independence are Israeli citizens.
What is the result of Israel refusing to recognize “unrecognized villages”?
State does not recognize illegal construction or settlements, and so is unwilling to provide basic services (electricity, water, sewage, roads, infrastructure) to “unrecognized villages.” The residents of the settlement pay no municipal taxes. On the other hand, the State of Israel has certain fundamental responsibilities towards its citizens, which it cannot disregard even when dealing with “illegal” settlers.
Forum Co-Existence in Negev v Minister of Infrastructure.
The State of Israel is bound to provide some critical infrastructure to its citizens (such a bridge for children to cross a polluted river to get to school), even in “unrecognized villages.”
Inyias al-Atrash v Minister of Health.
There is no right to electricity in “unrecognized villages” — the State of Israel is not obligated to connect homes in “unrecognized villages” to electricity as those that live in the places choose to live there knowing they would not be able to connect to basic infrastructure.
Be’er Sheva District Court case with respect to the “unrecognized village” of Rahme.
In May 2009, the Be’er Sheva District Court ordered the Ministry of Education and the Yeruham Local Council to open a kindergarten in the unrecognized Bedouin village of Rahme before the start of the upcoming school year. Failure to provide educational framework for children constitutes a violation of the children’s right to education and equality.
Hamid v The Minister of Interior.
The right to vote, while a fundamental right, may be temporarily denied/suspended in cases of illegal settlement.
What was the decision of the Central Elections Committee for the April 2019 elections with regards to those living in “unrecognized villages”?
In recently held elections, the Central Elections Committee refused to have polling stations especially put in place for the residents of the “unrecognized villages”; as a result, non-governmental organizations had to conduct a quick funding campaign to provide transportation to the Bedouin residents of the “unrecognized villages” and enable them to exercise their right to vote.
Abu Afash v Home Front Command.
With regards to illegal settlements or “unrecognized villages,” the High Court of Justice will defer to the Home Front Command when it comes to protection of their citizens. There is no inequality that exists if Bedouins receive the same amount of protection as Jewish citizens.
Abdullah Abu Musa’ed et al v Water Commissioner and Israel Lands Administration.
The right to water deserves constitutional protection as part of the right to individual dignity under Israel’s Basic Law: Human Dignity and Freedom. At the same time, the Court held that the right to water is not absolute but must be balanced against the rights of the state by applying the criteria of reasonableness and proportionality.
The Ottoman Land Code created which two categories of land pertinent to the Bedouin discussion?
Mewat and miri.