On 12 January 2011, Arab Bedouin citizens of Israel  who are residents of Umm al-Hieran, the southern area of the unrecognized  village of Atir-Umm al-Hieran, in cooperation with Bimkom – Planners for  Planning Rights and Adalah submitted an objection to the National Council for  Planning and Building (NCPB) against the building of a new exclusively Jewish  town to be called “Hiran” on the land on which Atir-Umm al-Hieran is located  (the Nahal Yatir area).  
The master plan (Plan 15/02/107) aims to build the  Jewish town of ‘Hiran' after demolishing the homes of the 500 Arab residents of  Umm al-Hieran and evacuating them from the area that falls within its  designated borders.  According to the  Hiran master plan, most of the Arab Bedouin residents' homes are located in the  zone designated for residential buildings, while others are situated in the  zone for public lands, including a proposed forest. The objection argued that the  plan proposed only one option – the demolition of Arab Bedouin homes and the  forced eviction of the residents that have lived in the area for more than 55  years.  The implementation of the plan  would result in gross violations of the constitutional rights of residents to  property, dignity and equality. The objection also argued that planning  committee could have investigated and proposed a less devastating alternative  to this plan. For example, the plan could have recommended the recognition of  the village. 
Cesar Yehudken, an urban planner with BIMKOM, stated  that: “The plan totally ignores the situation on the ground and the rights of  the Bedouin residents. It is evidence of the government's policy to congregate  the Bedouin into a few recognized towns. Furthermore, this plan represents a  new level of discrimination in the division of land and resources for the  Bedouin community in the Naqab.” 
The submission of the objection is the most recent legal  action taken by the residents of Umm al-Hieran in a planning process that has spanned  over the last over seven years.  On 20  July 2010, the NCPB decided to recognize the northern area of the village of Atir-Umm al-Hieran, where the residents  of Atir live and accepted the proposal that the residents of Umm al-Hieran  would move to Atir according to a specific time-line and process. In a rare  move, Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu's office intervened in the decision and  requested that the NCPB reconsider its decision. The NCPB committee members  complied with the request and retracted the recognition.
  
Adalah Attorney Suhad Bishara, one of the drafters  of the objection, argued that: “All the facts included in the objection lead us  clearly to the conclusion that the plan was (built) to give preference to the  interests of the Jewish residents above the interests of the Bedouin who have  lived in this village for more than 55 years. This is a blatant violation of  the people's right to equality.  The  practice of evacuating a certain group of residents in favor of another based  on nationality and/or religion is a policy of illegal segregation."
The Objection