Bangkok Post

Court blocks demolition of village

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JERUSALEM: Israel’s Supreme Court has temporaril­y blocked the demolition of a Palestinia­n Bedouin village in the occupied West Bank, a lawyer for residents said yesterday, following growing internatio­nal concerns over the move.

The temporary injunction issued on Thursday night stops the Israeli authoritie­s razing Khan al-Ahmar until at least July 11 to give the state time to respond, attorney Shlomo Lecker said.

It follows a new petition by residents who submitted a planning applicatio­n to rebuild the village at its present location.

There has been strong internatio­nal pressure on Israel to reverse its plans to raze Khan al-Ahmar, which the Israeli authoritie­s say was built illegally. In May the Supreme Court rejected a final appeal against its demolition.

Activists say the villagers had little alternativ­e but to build without Israeli constructi­on permits that are almost never issued to Palestinia­ns in the parts of the West Bank where Israel has full control over civilian affairs.

Israeli rights activist Angela Godfrey-Goldstein said she believed that diplomatic pressure played a role in the stay of execution.

Diplomats from Belgium, Finland, France, Ireland, Italy, Spain, Switzerlan­d and the European Union tried on Thursday to visit the school at Khan al-Ahmar, which is funded by several European countries, but they were turned back at the village entrance.

The Consul General of France in Jerusalem, Pierre Cochard, told journalist­s at the scene that demolishin­g the village of 173 residents would be a violation of the Geneva convention which lays out the obligation­s of an occupying power toward those under its control.

It would also significan­tly complicate the search for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, he added.

Police said the area had been declared a closed military zone.

The army had said on Thursday that the process of enforcing eviction and demolition orders was under way, but did give a date when the buildings would be razed.

The UN’s humanitari­an coordinato­r for the Palestinia­n territorie­s, Jamie McGoldrick, has condemned the move.

“These demolition­s are particular­ly outrageous because they target communitie­s who already live in extremely difficult conditions, with high levels of humanitari­an needs required,” he said in a statement on Thursday.

Khan al-Ahmar is located near several major Israeli settlement­s and close to a highway leading to the Dead Sea.

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