Creative Palestinian gardener uses hundreds of spent tear gas canisters as PLANT POTS

Flowers in the West Bank mark land Palestinians won back after court battle to re-route Israeli security barrier



They are planted in the used tear gas canisters fired by Israeli soldiers during demonstrations against the occupation

Israel says barrier is needed to protect civilians, but critics say it masks an attempt to illegally annex Palestinian land



A Palestinian woman waters dozens of plants near her desert home, each growing from used tear gas canisters collected in years of clashes with Israeli soldiers.

Her curious garden, photographed today, is in the village of Bilin, near the West Bank city of Ramallah, the de facto capital of the State of Palestine.

Much of the territory is disputed. Israel continues to expand settlements in the West Bank which the international community have long ago ruled to be illegal.

Disputed land: A Palestinian woman waters dozens of plants near her desert home, each growing from used tear gas canisters collected in clashes with Israeli soldiers during protests against the West Bank occupation

Poignant: The curious garden, photographed today, is in the village of Bilin, near the West Bank city of Ramallah, the de facto capital of the State of Palestine

Symbolic: The flowers, with their unusual pots, mark land Palestinians were able to reclaim two years ago after a court battle to re-route Israel's controversial security wall

The flowers, with their unusual pots, mark land Palestinians were able to reclaim two years ago after a court battle to re-route Israel's controversial security wall.

Still under construction, the Israeli West Bank barrier is a security wall that will eventually stretch 430 miles around the entire West Bank region.

Israel argues that the barrier is needed to protect its people from Palestinian terrorism, and since construction began the number of suicide bombing attacks have fallen significantly.

But critics of the policy object that the route of the barrier deviates substantially from internationally agreed boundaries into territories occupied since the 1967 Six-Day War.

They argue that it uses security concerns to mask an illegal attempt to annex Palestinian land.

A flower hangs from the barbed wire of Israel's barrier: Still under construction, the Israeli West Bank barrier is a security wall that will eventually stretch 430 miles around the entire West Bank region

Beauty in the midst of horror: Israel argues that the barrier is needed to protect its people from Palestinian terrorism, and since construction began the number of suicide bombing attacks have fallen significantly

Surviving in adversity: But critics of the policy object that the route of the barrier deviates substantially from internationally agreed boundaries and uses security fears to mask an illegal attempt to annex Palestinian land

Meanwhile, Israel's incursions into Palestinian territories continue on a daily basis. A child was shot and injured by Israeli army fire just yesterday at a permanent refugee camp just north of Ramallah.

Palestinian medical sources said the child, Yazan Mahmoud Al-‘Abed, 10, was shot by a rubber-coated metal bullet after dozens of soldiers stormed into the camp where they met by a hail of stones from local youths.

A Palestinian ambulance rushed to the scene but soldiers delayed medics in their efforts to reach the wounded boy, the sources said.