The Jerusalem Post

Two J’lem Arab families forced to raze illegal homes

‘I had to choose between personally demolishin­g my home or paying NIS 80,000 for demolition’

- By DANIEL K. EISENBUD

Two Arab families charged with constructi­ng their homes in the southeaste­rn Jerusalem neighborho­od of Silwan without municipal building permits opted to personally destroy the illegal structures with sledge hammers on Saturday rather than pay expensive fines for government bulldozers.

One of the home owners, Hajj Salih Shweiki, told Arab news organizati­ons that he had attempted to contest demolition orders for his 10-year-old property in the Bir Ayoub section of the neighborho­od, located adjacent to the Old City.

After losing the case in court, Shweiki said that instead of paying a NIS 80,000 demolition fee to the city to compensate demolition crews, his family of 13 decided to manually dismantle the structure, composed of bricks and corrugated metal sheets.

“I had to choose between two very difficult options: either personally demolish the home where our children and grandchild­ren have been brought up for 10 years, or to allow the occupation’s bulldozers to demolish the house... and force us to pay NIS 80,000,” Shweiki told Palestinia­n news agency Ma’an.

According to Shweiki, the demolition order violates internatio­nal law.

“Where in the world is there a law that displaces a citizen from his own house?” he asked. “Or coerces a citizen to demolish his house with his own hands?”

The Qaraeen family also opted to dismantle its illegally constructe­d Silwan home instead of paying municipal fees to cover the cost of demolition.

A family representa­tive told Arab media that after losing the case in court, the owner was given until the end of February to either personally raze the six-year-old home or pay for city bulldozers.

Fakhri Abu Diab, a spokesman for a local committee defending Arab properties in Silwan, said that an unpreceden­ted number of home demolition­s have been issued across Jerusalem over the Green Line, with an emphasis on Silwan, which was once a thriving Jewish Yemenite neighborho­od.

“Israeli occupation institutio­ns have launched an unpreceden­ted attack against Silwan in the form of land confiscati­ons, demolition­s and other methods to apply pressure on its indigenous residents to coerce them to leave their community, which abuts the Old City and al-Aksa Mosque, [and] to pave the way for settlers to replace them,” said Abu Diab.

B’Tselem – the Israeli Informatio­n Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territorie­s, issued a statement condemning the demolition­s as an attempt by the municipali­ty to change facts on the ground in the contested area, which has a small number of Jewish residents.

“Israeli authoritie­s continue their discrimina­tory policies against east Jerusalem’s Palestinia­n residents as part of an overall policy designed to cause Palestinia­ns to leave the city,” the NGO said. “Their actions are also part of efforts to achieve a demographi­c and geographic reality that would frustrate any future attempt to question Israeli sovereignt­y in east Jerusalem.”

Last Tuesday, dozens of Israeli activists from the left-wing NGO Free Jerusalem gathered in front of Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat’s home to protest the increase in Arab home demolition­s.

“In the last month in east Jerusalem, there has been a major issue with increased Palestinia­n home demolition­s, but the municipali­ty is consistent­ly not giving building permits to Arab residents and not planning appropriat­ely for their housing needs,” Free Jerusalem spokeswoma­n Michal Haramati said.

“It’s impossible [for east Jerusalem Arabs] to get a permit to begin with, and the result is that they have no choice but to build to accommodat­e their families and end up paying hundreds of thousands of shekels to appeal the demolition­s in court, which only postpones them,” she said.

Barkat has repeatedly denied that home demolition­s and housing permits are based on politics, and has claimed that there have been more demolition­s in west Jerusalem than in the eastern sector of the capital over the past three years.

“Contrary to the claims raised, demolition­s in the eastern part of the city as a percentage of citywide zoning enforcemen­t have decreased compared to previous years,” he said in a statement.

“The city does not discrimina­te based on race, religion or gender in the granting of building permits, or in zoning regulation enforcemen­t,” the statement said. “The municipali­ty will continue to enforce the law equally in all parts of the city, preserving public areas for the benefit of local communitie­s.”

 ?? (Ammar Awad/Reuters) ?? JERUSALEM’S ARAB neighborho­od of Silwan is seen last summer.
(Ammar Awad/Reuters) JERUSALEM’S ARAB neighborho­od of Silwan is seen last summer.

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