Land Developer BDS (Leviev)

Valentine's Day protest at Leviev NYC on Feb 6, 2016
Third time we shut down the store. Our Valentine's Day protest at Leviev NYC on Feb 6, 2016

Document

April 10, 2008

Ms. Ann Veneman
Executive Director
UNICEF


Dear Ms. Veneman,

After conducting more than three years of nonviolent protests against the construction of Israel’s wall and the Israeli settlement of Mattityahu East on our village’s land, after enduring countless beatings from Israeli soldiers, teargas, bullets, invasions and arrests, we cannot accept UNICEF’s failure to reject support from Lev Leviev. Leviev is the owner of one of the companies that has built Mattityahu East. While we were dismayed to learn that Lev Leviev sponsored fundraising activities for UNICEF in France in 2007-2008, we were more dismayed to learn that UNICEF did not immediately renounce Leviev after this information was brought to UNICEF’s attention.

Israeli settlements like Mattityahu East violate international law and countless UN resolutions, all of which serve as the foundation for UNICEF’s mandate. Furthermore, during the course of more than 200 demonstrations to prevent the seizure of 50% of our land for the illegal construction of Mattityahu East, the Israeli military has injured around 1,000 civilian protesters and arrested 50. Around 300 of those injured and 13 of those jailed were children from Bil’in.

We are connected to this land. Our mothers took us to harvest olives before we could speak. We remember playing under the olive trees which have since been uprooted by the Israeli settlers who have moved here. There is now a huge and growing Israeli settlement bloc called Modi’in Illit, which includes the settlement of Mattityahu East, where we played as children. It is hard for us to accept the idea that our children cannot play on the land where we played in our childhood.

In Bil'in we have chosen to engage in a long nonviolent campaign of creative protests with the support of Israeli and international activists to prevent the seizure of our land. We know the Israeli army can choose to deal with us in two ways. Should the army choose violence, everyone sees what we are up against. And should the army refrain from violence, we achieve our aim of stopping their bulldozers. But even if the soldiers put down their weapons, which so far they haven’t done, that would not make us equals. We would always be stronger, because we have the power of justice on our side.

Among those who have suffered from the Israeli military’s use of violence during our protests are children from Bil’in like Abdullah Ahmad Issa Yassin. Abdullah Yassin was fourteen when he was arrested in October 2005 and imprisoned for two months. He was taken away by Israeli forces that stormed his house in the middle of the night, traumatizing Abdullah and his siblings. He was charged with taking part in popular demonstrations against the wall. Abdullah had been saving his money to buy toys and new clothes for the upcoming Eid holiday. Instead he spent the Eid in jail. Abdullah is now 17 years old, and he has been injured ten times by rubber-coated steel bullets fired by Israeli soldiers during various protests.

Bilal Rabah Ahmad Abu-Rahmah was 14 years-old when he was arrested and imprisoned for four months. Bilal was a simple child who liked to play with younger children. He was playing ball in the street in 2006, when an Israeli patrol passed by, scaring away Bilal's friends. Bilal alone stayed put frozen with fear and was arrested. Bilal was psychologically traumatized by his arrest and imprisonment, and he now requires special help from his parents.

As a result of Bil’in’s persistent protests and in response to our legal petition, in September, 2007, Israel's Supreme Court ruled that Israel's wall must be rerouted to return half of our village’s land that was being seized for settlements. Six months after this partial legal victory, the Israeli army has failed to move the wall. Therefore, we have continued our nonviolent struggle to save the olive groves that our families have cultivated for centuries, and we have put our experience at the service of other communities struggling against the wall and settlements.

In Bil'in, we have chosen a strategy that shows unequivocally who is the victim and who is the victimizer. It is unconscionable that UNICEF, an organization created to support human rights and international law, would fail to clearly denounce companies like Leviev’s that, supported by violence, are trampling on UN resolutions, international law and children’s rights.

For the people of Bil’in, it is irrelevant whether Leviev donated to UNICEF directly or indirectly. We eagerly await UNICEF’s decision to renounce all connections with Leviev, a man whose company has stolen our land, and is destroying our children’s future.

Sincerely,


The Popular Committee Against the Wall and Settlements – Bil’in Village


cc: Bernt Aasen UNICEF Chief of Staff
UNICEF Jerusalem Office
UNICEF Middle East Regional Office
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon
Louise Arbour, High Commissioner for Human Rights
Adalah-NY

 

Document

April 10, 2008

Ms. Ann Veneman
Executive Director
UNICEF


Dear Ms. Veneman,

The people of Jayyous, a village in the West Bank’s Qalqilya district, were deeply saddened to learn that UNICEF has been accepting fundraising support from Israeli businessman Lev Leviev. Leviev is the co-owner of Leader, the Israeli company that is building the settlement of Zufim on our village’s land. Leviev’s companies are also building Israeli settlements on Bil’in’s land, and are building in the settlements of Har Homa and Maale Adumim around Jerusalem. Leviev is destroying the olive groves and farms that have sustained Jayyous for centuries, and is profiting from human rights abuses. However, we were even more profoundly disturbed that, after these facts were brought to UNICEF’s attention, UNICEF has failed to take immediate steps to reject all future support from Leviev.

Leader’s construction of Israeli settlement homes on Jayyous’ agricultural land directly violates international law and the very UN resolutions which UNICEF is committed to upholding. Leader is destroying our village, and the lives and the futures of Jayyous’ children. Jayyous was one of the most productive agricultural areas in the West Bank. Today, many farmers from our village can no longer reach their farmland due to Israel’s construction of a wall on our land, a wall intended to annex Jayyous’ land for the planned expansion of Zufim. With the land their families have worked for centuries seized for Israeli settlements, many parents can no longer afford to send their children to school. Many of our children see no hope or future in Jayyous.

In October, 1988, the Israeli military governor of our district, Qalqilya, declared nearly 500 acres of Jayyous' agricultural land "state land." The declaration granted us 45 days to prepare our landownership documents and maps in order to appeal that decision to an Israeli military court. 79 farmers from Jayyous appealed. In May, 1996, the Israeli court decided on our 1988 appeal. 18 farmers from Jayyous lost all their land, some lost part of their land, while others kept their land. In 1993, three years before the Israeli court decision which took that land away, Leader established a quarry on some of Jayyous' land that we were appealing to keep.

During this period it became clear to the people of Jayyous that Leader was our enemy. Leader used bulldozers to clear our land for houses for Israeli settlers, and TNT to detonate more than 16 acres for a quarry. They uprooted all the olive trees on that land. As a direct result of the quarry work, all the vegetables and fruit nearby were covered with dust. Leader also uprooted the olive trees on two other plots. Many olive trees died because sewage from Zufim ran for many years through neighboring plots. Other plots were annexed to Zufim.

Leader then announced that it would build 1500 new homes for “North Zufim” in a large area located 1.2 miles north of the existing Zufim settlement. In 2002 the Israel government began building its wall deep inside Jayyous, up to 3.5 miles from the border with Israel, in order to annex 75% of Jayyous' land (1700 acres) as well as six underground wells to Zufim. The land to be cut off and used for Zufim’s expansion had been used to grow fruits and vegetables which sustain our village's economy. According to the respected Israeli human rights organization B'Tselem's 2005 report "Under the Guise of Security,” "the primary consideration in determining the route of the barrier around Zufin was to leave areas planned for the settlement's expansion and for a nearby industrial zone on the 'Israeli' side of the barrier", thus increasing "the number of Palestinians who are separated from their farmland, infringing their right to freedom of movement, their right to work and gain a livelihood, and their right of property."

Despite more than 60 nonviolent protests organized by Jayyous' people, and supported by Israeli and international activists, the wall has been built on our land, destroying 130 acres of Jayyous' land, uprooting 4,000 trees and cutting off 75% of our land. 419 Jayyous residents have been denied permits to pass through the gate in the Wall to reach their farmland. More than 70% of Jayyous' farmers are now denied access to their land, which in many cases happens to be the very area where Leader plans to expand Zufim. Hundreds of Israeli activists helped us to harvest our olives this fall because so many people from Jayyous could not reach their land.

As a result, our once-prosperous farming village of 3,400 hundred souls, which once provided food for 60,000 Palestinians, is now impoverished and dependent on external food aid. 57% of Jayyous’ families now depend on food aid from international and Palestinian organizations. An even greater number, 70% of families, are in great need of food aid, and this number is constantly increasing.

Leviev's settlement and Israel’s wall have impoverished our village to such a degree that 103 out of a total of 195 students in grades 7-12 were compelled to drop out of school. Many parents explain that they find it difficult or impossible to cover school expenses like tuition, clothes, and books. Our school’s headmaster appealed to Jayyous' friends abroad, but the money raised was only sufficient to help 92 students. The rest had to leave school to look for work. Our students are no longer motivated to study hard, because their dreams of attending universities now seem impossible. In 2002, before Israel began construction on the wall, 180 high school graduates from Jayyous were enrolled in university studies. That number has now dropped to 50.

We understand that Leviev contributes to fundraising events in France benefitting UNICEF programs to educate girls in Senegal. We ask why UNICEF, an organization dedicated to improving the lives of children worldwide, would accept Leviev’s support in educating Senegalese children while his companies are destroying the lives of Palestinian children in places like Jayyous?

In Jayyous, we are engaged in a struggle for justice, for our freedom – indeed, for our very lives. We fully expect that UNICEF will renounce all support from Lev Leviev, the owner of the company that is destroying our village and the dreams of our children.

Sincerely,


The Land Defense Committee of Jayyous
The Municipality of Jayyous


cc: Bernt Aasen UNICEF Chief of Staff
UNICEF Jerusalem Office
UNICEF Middle East Regional Office
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon
Louise Arbour, High Commissioner for Human Rights
Adalah-NY
 

Press Coverage

Reuters

Abstract: 

The U.N. children's fund UNICEF has severed ties with an Israeli billionaire and financial backer due to his suspected involvement in building settlements in the occupied West Bank, UNICEF said on Friday.

Press Release

 Diamond Mogul, Lev Leviev, Facing Increasing Pressure for Human Rights Violations

Click here for the original PDF of the letter from UNICEF.

New York, NY, June 19, 2008 – A senior advisor to UNICEF’s Director said in a letter today that UNICEF will reject all partnerships with, or financial support from, Israeli billionaire Lev Leviev. Leviev had previously provided UNICEF with support by sponsoring fundraising events in France. Leviev’s past support for UNICEF is featured in a number of places on his company’s website (www.leviev.com).

UNICEF’s rejection of Leviev’s support followed meetings with Adalah-NY, letters from organizations and Palestinian communities advocating a boycott of Leviev’s companies, and a visit by UNICEF officials to Jayyous, one of the Palestinian communities where a Leviev company is building Israeli settlements. Leviev’s diamond-mining companies in Angola have also been accused of serious human rights abuses.

Abdullah Abu Rahme, a community leader from the West Bank village of Bil’in, said, “We welcome UNICEF’s decision to hold one of the companies that has been building Mattityahu East settlement accountable for attempting to destroy our community. Our village has engaged in a three and a half year nonviolent campaign to save our land, and an international boycott is an important complement to our weekly protests. This is a victory, but we need many more like it.” Leviev’s companies have also recently built homes in the settlements of Maale Adumim and Har Homa, both of which cut off East Jerusalem from the West Bank.

Press Release

United Arab Emirates representatives in New York affirm boycott of Israeli settlement-builder Leviev

 Adalah-NY Contact: info@adalahny.org

 New York, NY, May 29, 2008 – Officials at the United Arab Emirates Mission to the UN affirmed their government’s commitment to boycotting the businesses of Israeli settlement-builder Lev Leviev in a meeting Tuesday afternoon with representatives from Adalah-NY and Jews Against the Occupation (JATO). Leviev is attempting to open jewelry stores in the Emirate of Dubai and to sell his diamonds there. The UAE officials promised to pass on to their government photos from Dubai, one taken Tuesday, showing that Leviev’s local partner Arif Ben Khadra is currently advertising and selling Leviev’s products in Dubai in defiance of the Emirate boycott policy. As the meeting took place, twelve New Yorker human rights advocates held signs and distributed flyers in the street below in support of the boycott.

Press Coverage

gulfnews

Abstract: 

A Jewish-Palestinian advocacy group, Adalah-NY, held a thank-you rally outside the UAE's representative office in New York on Tuesday over the country's stand on not allowing a controversial Israeli businessman from opening a store in Dubai.

Press Coverage

The Palestine Chronicle

Abstract: 

Officials at the United Arab Emirates Mission to the UN affirmed their government's commitment to boycotting the businesses of Israeli settlement-builder Lev Leviev in a meeting Tuesday afternoon with representatives from Adalah-NY and Jews Against the Occupation (JATO).

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