Another
myth speaks of the existence of only 45 villages where tens of thousands of
people live. Their present tactic is to claim that the Negev is a huge
territory and “all we are talking about is the recognition of only 45
villages,” as stated in a position paper circulated by the Association for
Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI) , Bimkom, and the Council of the Unrecognized
Villages, which claims that the institutional recognition and legal
organization of these “45 villages” would solve the prolonged dispute
between the Bedouin and the State of Israel:
“The
Goldberg commission has recognized that the main solution to the arrangement of
Bedouin settlement is recognition of unrecognized villages, in order to prevent
the deterioration of an already intolerable situation and to bring about an
historic solution to the dispute. This is the central principle that stands at
the heart of any solution, and we must follow it in order to bring about an
agreement. As will be detailed below, this principle can be assimilated in
relation to every unrecognized village in the Negev.”
The
Bedouin connect this claim to 45 points on the map of the Negev (See the 45
blue dotes on the map published by the Council of Unrecognized Bedouin villages
in the Negev). What they neglect, to tell us is that these points are attached
to thousands of clusters of structures spread all across the Northern Negev, in
the area between Beersheva, Arad and Dimona, creating one large contiguous
territory of illegal Bedouin villages.
A
bird’s eye view over the village of “Al-Ara”, one of the blue dots on the
previous map (south of the town of Kseifa), with the help of “zoom in” and
“zoom out” functions (which can be easily replicated in Google Earth), reveals
that spread across the Northern Negev are actually thousands of clusters of
Bedouin residences in various stages of development.
The
red markings on the following photographs are polygons indicating illegal
construction clusters containing three or more structures placed together. As
you zoom out, thousands of these small areas merge together to create the most
accurate picture of Bedouin settlement in the Northern Negev. In comparison
using the points on the previous map is not an effective method to get an
accurate picture of the number of Bedouin villages.
Adding
polygons to really see Bedouin settlement
The
below map shows the overlay the 45 blue dots from the previous map on an aerial
photo including the actual Bedouin settlement areas described above.
Conclusion:
Aerial photography proves conclusively that the claim of “only 45
villages” has no basis in reality. The ‘Regavim’ investigation as signified by
the red layer of markings on the aerial photography points to the existence of
over 2000 villages/clusters/hamlets.
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