Alwaght-Israeli regime Minister for War Affairs, Moshe Ya’alon has officially banned Palestinians from traveling on Israeli regime-run public transportation in the West Bank, according to a report by Haaretz, Israel regime's most prominent newspaper.
The new apartheid law dictates that Palestinians cannot take buses that go from central occupied lands to the West Bank. They must go out of their way, to the Eyal Crossing, near the city Qalqilyah, “far from populated settler areas”.
It is already difficult for Palestinians to enter occupied lands. Palestinian workers traveling into occupied lands for their jobs have to go through high-security and militarized check points. Those who are allowed to cross are not allowed to sleep in there. Unemployment and poverty are high in the West Bank because of the 47-year Zionists military occupation. Palestinians seek employment opportunities in Israeli regime, often in low-paid, dangerous work such as construction. Because of the checkpoints and Zionist regime's militarized security apparatus, it takes Palestinians a long time to travel into occupied lands (if they are even able to do so at all). This new decision will increase their already inordinately large commute times even more.
A security official involved told Haaretz that “no Palestinian will be prevented from reaching his destination”; this may be true, but the question is how much longer will it take that Palestinian to travel between work and home?
Haaretz notes that the decision to segregate buses did not come out of the blue; Ya’alon decided on it after facing “intense pressure from settlers.” The paper explains the Samaria Settlers' Committee and local Zionists authorities “conducted an aggressive campaign” to ban Palestinians. It adds that “settlers have tried on multiple occasions to prevent the Palestinians from commuting on those buses, and have released a video calling for them to be banned.” Ya’alon met with settler leaders and assured them he would implement the apartheid, Zionists-only policies they desired.
It is clear that this decision is explicitly motivated out of a racism, not out of security concerns. Haaretz indicates that the Israel regime Ministry for War affairs has officially stated it “does not view the presence of Palestinians on West Bank buses as a security threat.” The paper interviewed Ministry for War affairs Central Command Major General Nitzan Alon, who insisted that West Bank Palestinians do not pose a “security threat,” as they already “must obtain pre-approval from the Shin Bet security service and Israel Police in order to receive permits. They then undergo body checks at the border crossings.”
Member of Knesset Moti Yogev, of the far-right, religious, pro-settler Habayit Hayehudi party, explained his reasoning: “Riding these buses is unreasonable. They are full of Arabs.”
This call for bus segregation is not new. According to AFP Zionists settlers in the West Bank have called for years for Palestinians to be banned from public transport. In many ways, Israeli regime buses have been moving toward segregation for some time. In March 2013, Zionist regime created Palestinian-only buses. Although not technically mandatory, racist Zionists used the existence of these buses to pressure Palestinians into de facto segregation.
A variety of human and civil rights organizations publicly criticized this de facto racism. Among these was Israeli regime human rights organization B’Tselem. In the wake of this most recent decision, the Zionist regime officially implementing de jure segregation, AFP interviewed B’Tselem, which insisted: “It is time to stop hiding behind technical arrangements… and admit this military procedure is thinly veiled pandering to the demand for racial segregation on buses.”
Indeed Zionist's will never put up with Palestinians, since they believe Palestine is their historical land and Arabs have had occupied it. They are seeking for a right opportunity to occupy the whole Palestine even if by making genocide on Palestinians. Therefore, such petty racism for kid-killer regime that killed more than 2000 Gazans, mostly children and women, in 50-day period is as negligible as drinking a glass of water.