The Iron Wall
The Iron Wall is a 2006 documentary film about the establishment of Israeli settlements in the West Bank, which, the film argues, is a strategy for permanent occupation of the territory. Produced by the Palestinian Agricultural Relief Committees and Palestinians for Peace and Democracy, it was the "Official Selection" of the Al-Jazeera Television Production Festival
The Iron Wall follows the timeline of the settlements
and examines their effect on the peace process, featuring interviews
with noted peace activists and political analysts, both Israeli and
Palestinian, including Jeff Halper, Akiva Eldar and Hind Khoury. The film also covers the controversial construction of the Israeli West Bank barrier.
From
that day these words became the official and unspoken policy of the
Zionist movement and later the state of Israel. Settlements were used
from the beginning to create a Zionist foothold in Palestine.
After
1967 and the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, the aim of the
settlement movement became clear – create facts on the ground and make
the creation of a Palestinian state impossible. Thirty nine years of
occupation and the policy started showing results. There are now more
than 200 settlements and outposts scattered throughout the West Bank
blocking the geographic possibility of a contiguous Palestinian
territory.
The Iron Wall documentary exposes this
phenomenon and follows the timeline, size, population of the
settlements, and its impact on the peace process. This film also touches
on the latest project to make the settlements a permanent fact on the
ground – the wall that Israel is building in the West Bank and its
impact on the Palestinian’s peoples.
Settlements
and related infrastructures are impacting every aspect of life for all
Palestinians from land confiscation, theft of natural resources,
confiscation of the basic human rights, creation of an apartheid-like
system, to the devastating impact in regards to the future of the region
and the prospect of the peace process.
Palestinians
and Israelis began the peace process based on a very simple principle:
land for peace. Settlements destroy that principle and create a land
with no peace.
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