Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Work starts to clear mines from traditional site of Jesus’s baptism

-

Israeli and international experts have started clearing thousands of wartime landmines and explosive devices from one of Christianity's holiest sites, in the occupied West Bank, the Israeli defence ministry said Tuesday.

It said work began this week to clear about 3,000 pieces of ordnance believed to be scattered around the Qasr al-Yahud Greek Orthodox monastery, on the banks of the River Jordan, at the spot where many believe Jesus was baptised by his cousin John.

The mines date from the Six-Day War of 1967 in which Israel seized the West Bank from Jordan.

"Of the 3,000, some of them are Israeli, some of them are Jordanian and some of them we'll only know when we find them," defence ministry spokeswoman Arielle Hefez told AFP.

Britain-based HALO Trust, the world's largest humanitarian mine clearing organisation, is working with the Israel National Mine Action Authority (INMAA) to clear what the defence ministry described as "roughly one million square metres (10.8 million square feet) of land."

HALO said on its website that there are an estimated 2,600 anti-personnel and anti-tank landmines at the Qasr al-Yahud site, restricting access for the more than 400,000 pilgrims who visit each year.

"It is home to ancient churches and monasteries, which haven't been safe to visit for nearly 50 years," it added.

It said that according to testimonies of former soldiers, an unknown number of booby traps were also laid.

"This makes the clearance of the site a complex task."

Workers of the UK-based HALO Trust  the world's largest humanitarian demining organisation  pre...
Workers of the UK-based HALO Trust, the world's largest humanitarian demining organisation, prepare to start clearing the area around one of Christianity's holiest sites, Qasr al-Yahud in the West Bank, an operation they estimate will take two years
MENAHEM KAHANA, AFP

HALO estimated that the clearance work would take two years and cost around $1.5 million.

The defence ministry said the site houses churches of eight different denominations.

"Once the clearance is complete and INMAA and HALO officials can assure the site is safe, the church plots will be returned to their respective denominations and visitors will once again be able to visit these holy sites."

Another site on the Jordanian side of the river -- Wadi al-Kharrar, or Bethany Beyond the Jordan -- is also venerated as the place of Jesus's baptism.

Israeli and international experts have started clearing thousands of wartime landmines and explosive devices from one of Christianity’s holiest sites, in the occupied West Bank, the Israeli defence ministry said Tuesday.

It said work began this week to clear about 3,000 pieces of ordnance believed to be scattered around the Qasr al-Yahud Greek Orthodox monastery, on the banks of the River Jordan, at the spot where many believe Jesus was baptised by his cousin John.

The mines date from the Six-Day War of 1967 in which Israel seized the West Bank from Jordan.

“Of the 3,000, some of them are Israeli, some of them are Jordanian and some of them we’ll only know when we find them,” defence ministry spokeswoman Arielle Hefez told AFP.

Britain-based HALO Trust, the world’s largest humanitarian mine clearing organisation, is working with the Israel National Mine Action Authority (INMAA) to clear what the defence ministry described as “roughly one million square metres (10.8 million square feet) of land.”

HALO said on its website that there are an estimated 2,600 anti-personnel and anti-tank landmines at the Qasr al-Yahud site, restricting access for the more than 400,000 pilgrims who visit each year.

“It is home to ancient churches and monasteries, which haven’t been safe to visit for nearly 50 years,” it added.

It said that according to testimonies of former soldiers, an unknown number of booby traps were also laid.

“This makes the clearance of the site a complex task.”

Workers of the UK-based HALO Trust  the world's largest humanitarian demining organisation  pre...

Workers of the UK-based HALO Trust, the world's largest humanitarian demining organisation, prepare to start clearing the area around one of Christianity's holiest sites, Qasr al-Yahud in the West Bank, an operation they estimate will take two years
MENAHEM KAHANA, AFP

HALO estimated that the clearance work would take two years and cost around $1.5 million.

The defence ministry said the site houses churches of eight different denominations.

“Once the clearance is complete and INMAA and HALO officials can assure the site is safe, the church plots will be returned to their respective denominations and visitors will once again be able to visit these holy sites.”

Another site on the Jordanian side of the river — Wadi al-Kharrar, or Bethany Beyond the Jordan — is also venerated as the place of Jesus’s baptism.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

World

The U.S., China, and Germany lead in real GDP figures just as they do in nominal terms in 2025.

Business

A few tech giants accumulating massive power coupled with AI is posing huge global rights challenges and needs regulation, the UN human rights chief.

Entertainment

Young actor Tait Blum chatted about starring in the series "The Last Frontier" on Apple TV.

Tech & Science

Global tech leaders will pack Lisbon's annual Web Summit from Tuesday to talk Artificial Intelligence, robots and startups.