A tiny Palestinian village in the Hebron hills could soon cease to exist after a nine-year legal battle with Israeli authorities who say its 167 residents live on an archaeological site.
Israel's supreme court is expected to make a final decision on the fate of Khirbet Zanuta soon.
The village in the south of the occupied West Bank, around 20 kilometres (12 miles) from the Israeli city of Beersheba, includes makeshift homes made of stones, metal, clay and even tyres.
Caves in the area have also been used as homes in the past, and its residents farm the hundreds of hectares of surrounding land, raising sheep and goats.
"I was born here before 1967," said village head Rashad al-Tal, 65, referring to the year when Israel's occupation of the West Bank began.
"We lived in a cave and we walked seven kilometres to go to school in Dahriya," the closest city, he added as his daughter stirred milk behind him to make curd.
He said villagers began to build houses in the 1970s without having permits from the Israeli authorities and were fined for doing so.
Such permits are extremely difficult to obtain for Palestinians living in most of the West Bank.
"We showed them all the ownership papers for our land and asked for construction permits," said Tal.
- Building in Area C -
While Israeli authorities say structures in the village are illegal and are built on an archaeological site, the villagers themselves suspect other motives.
They allege that Israel wants to clear more space for settlers, since a settlement industrial zone called Meitarim is located less than a kilometre away.
Villagers say explosives were used to develop the industrial zone and question why this would have been done if the nearby area was archaeologically important.
Khirbet Zanuta is in what is known as Area C, the part of the West Bank under complete Israeli control.
Around 60 percent of the Palestinian territory falls under that classification, originally set up under the 1990s Oslo accords in an arrangement meant to be temporary.
Israel's military decides on construction permits in Area C, and they are rarely granted to Palestinians. The military demolishes structures it deems illegal.
That process, along with Israel's continuous settlement building in the West Bank, has been strongly criticised internationally as contributing to the erosion of the possibility of a two-state solution.
The court case involving Khirbet Zanuta is reaching its conclusion as debate over Israeli demolitions of Palestinian structures in the West Bank intensifies.
In 2015, Israel demolished 548 structures in the West Bank, displacing 787 Palestinians, according to UN figures.
But during the first four months of this year alone, 598 were demolished, displacing 858 people.
- 'They must leave' -
The legal battle over Khirbet Zanuta has been waged since 2007. With the two sides unable to settle, Israel's supreme court is expected to issue a ruling soon.
Israeli authorities have said in court filings that "Khirbet Zanuta is an archaeological site and residents' presence in the area can have an impact on the site.
"As a result, they must leave the area."
Israeli authorities declined further comment when contacted by AFP, saying their case was being presented in court.
Rights activists who support the villagers and their legal battle say claims about the area's importance as an archaeological site are exaggerated.
"We have consulted Israeli archaeological experts who say that the presence of the residents does not interfere with that of the historical remains," said Sharona Eliahu-Chai of the Association for Civil Rights in Israel.
Yoni Mizrachi of the Emek Shaveh NGO said that "every West Bank village contains remains", adding that those in Khirbet Zanuta are "neither very important nor very extensive".
"This is a political issue," he said. "When they want to expel residents, they say that it is an archaeological site."
Mizrachi said the village does indeed contain remains dating to the Iron Age and spanning the Roman, Byzantine and Islamic periods.
But he also alleged that there have been no excavations there since it was declared an archaeological site in 1968, while arguing that in any case the remains "do not belong to Israel, but to Palestine".
Others have pointed out that Jewish construction is allowed on much more important archaeological sites.
Source: AFP
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