Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Prefabricated classrooms, funded by EU aid in Ibziq, in the northern West Bank, were dismantled and confiscated by Israeli authorities.
Prefabricated classrooms, funded by EU aid in Ibziq, in the northern West Bank, were dismantled and confiscated by Israeli authorities. Photograph: Aref Daraghmeh, B’Tselem
Prefabricated classrooms, funded by EU aid in Ibziq, in the northern West Bank, were dismantled and confiscated by Israeli authorities. Photograph: Aref Daraghmeh, B’Tselem

Israel to auction prefab classrooms donated by EU to Palestinians

This article is more than 4 years old

Calls for Israeli authorities to rebuild West Bank structures confiscated by military

Israel’s defence ministry plans to hold an auction next week to sell two prefabricated classrooms that were donated to Palestinian schoolchildren by the EU.

The Civil Administration, the body tasked with running the occupation, tore down and confiscated the classrooms last October. They had been intended for 49 students, in grades one to six, in Ibziq, in the northern occupied West Bank.

An advertisement published in the Israeli newspaper Maariv said the sale would take place at Civil Administration offices in the West Bank.

After the classrooms were dismantled, the EU mission to Jerusalem and Ramallah condemned Israeli authorities and called on them to rebuild the structures in the same place “without delay”.

The classrooms were meant for 49 children in grades one to six. Photograph: Aref Daraghmeh, B’Tselem

“Every child has the right to access education and states have an obligation to protect, respect and fulfil this right, by ensuring that schools are inviolable safe spaces for children,” it said at the time.

“[T]he EU calls upon the Israeli authorities to halt demolitions and confiscations of Palestinian houses and property, in accordance with its obligations as an occupying power under international humanitarian law.”

A list of auction items, seen by the Guardian, showed dates, item numbers, locations and descriptions that matched the confiscated classroom structures. The sale also appeared to include material confiscated from Palestinians and Israeli settlers who built without authorisation.

Asked to comment on Thursday afternoon, the Civil Administration said it needed more time to respond.

Palestinians have limited autonomy in parts of the West Bank, mostly urban areas, but Israel maintains full control of most of the territory and demolishes homes and buildings it says were built without permission.

More than 400,000 Israelis have moved into the West Bank, building settlements on land seized from Palestinians. The prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has pledged to annex those settlements.

More on this story

More on this story

  • ‘Nobody could help us’: families tell of Gaza trauma after return to UK

  • ‘Families want to die together’: relatives count the cost of Gaza airstrikes

  • ‘We are the resistance’: show of defiance by Hamas as funeral parade follows battle in Jenin

  • An experts’ guide: culture to help understand the Israel-Palestine conflict

  • London’s pro-Palestine march live: 126 people arrested as police highlight ‘deeply concerning’ rightwing violence – as it happened

  • Israel-Hamas war: UN calls Gaza fighting ‘reprehensible’ – as it happened

  • Hundreds of thousands march in support for Gaza ceasefire on Armistice Day – video

  • Israeli troops in key battle with Hamas gunmen near Gaza City hospital

Most viewed

Most viewed