An outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) in the West Bank early this year has killed thousands of livestock, pushing Palestinian farmers already living under occupation to the brink of bankruptcy.
Mohammed Basheer said he had to incinerate hundreds of his dead lambs after the outbreak devastated livestock across the West Bank, leaving him with more than just a stinging financial loss.
For Basheer, the ordeal underlines the challenges facing farmers in occupied Palestinian territory, who complain that they are underserved by the Palestinian Authority (PA) and face constant threats from Jewish settlers.
Photo: AFP
“I got no help from the PA, not even a telephone call,” said Basheer, who owns thousands of livestock near the city of Nablus, expressing frustration over what he described as inaction from the Palestinian Ministry of Agriculture.
Palestinian farmers blamed the PA for halting a vaccination program that had proven essential in protecting livestock against an endemic disease. With animals absent from large stretches of grazing land, farmers fear land grabs from Jewish settlers who have repeatedly set up illegal outposts on West Bank land they claim is unused.
The PA “should protect us because we protect the land,” Basheer said. “The farms protect the land... If you remove the farmers, Israel takes the land.”
A new strain of FMD, which causes potentially lethal fevers and blisters in young animals, was detected in livestock in Jordan in November last year.
It soon spread across the West Bank, a territory occupied by Israel since 1967, and heavily reliant on agriculture.
However, the agriculture ministry has not carried out a regular vaccination drive since 2019. A ministry official who requested anonymity said that a normal year sees 60 to 70 percent of goats and sheep in the West Bank vaccinated against FMD.
That figure dropped to 20 percent in 2020 and last year, the official said.
The ministry blamed the COVID-19 pandemic, saying FMD vaccines were harder to source as vaccine producers worldwide pivoted operations to meet demand for COVID-19 shots.
The ministry also blamed Israel, claiming it obstructed the PA from procuring sufficient supply.
The allegation is false, said the Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT), the Israeli body responsible for civic affairs in the Palestinian territories.
“There has been no formal request from the Palestinian Authority for the import of such vaccines,” a COGAT statement said. “Nonetheless, considering the health requirement that has arisen, the State of Israel has transferred vaccine doses that were in its possession to the Palestinian Authority.”
Israel has officially confirmed about 2,000 animal deaths as a result of the FMD strain this year.
However, farmers and the agriculture ministry official said livestock deaths were likely far higher than the acknowledged toll.
Basheer said FMD losses had cost him US$150,000, and he accused Israel of hoarding vaccines.
“Our occupiers had continuous vaccines for all farmers, but we haven’t had anything in three years,” he said. “They’ve destroyed the farmers.”
In the West Bank’s Area C, which remains under full Israeli control, vacant agricultural land is a prime target for Jewish settlement expansion, experts said.
Eyal Hareuveni, a researcher at the anti-settlement watchdog B’Tselem, said that settler land grabs are often backed by Israel’s “twisted interpretation” of an Ottoman-era law that says land not cultivated for three consecutive years can be claimed.
“Israel can designate this as state land and take it for their own use, even if it’s land that is registered as private Palestinian land,” Hareuveni said.
More than 475,000 Jewish settlers live in the West Bank in communities widely regarded as illegal under international law. Israel’s governing coalition has continued to approve new settler homes across the territory, while acting sporadically against new outposts.
With no new cases detected since April, PA officials said the FMD outbreak is now under control.
By faltering on vaccinations, the PA had effectively given a boost to the settler movement, Palestinian Farmers’ Union executive director Abbas Milhem said.
“The real fight against occupation and annexation is in the land, but the farmers can’t stand alone,” he said. “We need some accountability for this.”
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