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\n <\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n UNRWA\/BIMKOM JOINT PRESS INVITATION<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n <\/p><\/div>\n \n UNRWA and BIMKOM launch groundbreaking report on Bedouin communities<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n\n relocated by Israel, determines their situation is unsustainable<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n \n 24 May 2013<\/p><\/div>\n \n East Jerusalem<\/p><\/div>\n \n <\/p><\/div>\n \n On 28 May 2013, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) and BIMKOM – Planners for Planning Rights will launch the al Jabal report, an unprecedented study on Bedouin communities relocated by Israel since 1997. <\/p><\/div>\n \n <\/p><\/div>\n \n The first study of its kind about the transfer of 150 Palestine refugee Bedouin families against their will in 1997, the report determines that their situation has become socially and economically “non-viable.” The joint UNRWA-BIMKOM report analyzes the consequences of the relocation plan that was implemented to make way for the expansion of the Ma’ale Adummim settlement, which, like all<\/span> <\/span>West Bank settlements<\/span> <\/span>is considered illegal under international law. <\/span><\/p><\/div>\n\n <\/p><\/div>\n \n The study highlights the deterioration of the social and economic status of the Bedouin refugees in al Jabal village to which they were transferred. Being forced to move to one central urban location close to the largest rubbish dump in the West Bank has deprived these mobile pastoralist communities of social cohesion and is destroying their traditional culture and their economic base.<\/p><\/div>\n |