Khaleej Times

Palestinia­n family evicted from home

- AFP

occupied Jerusalem — Israeli police on Tuesday evicted a Palestinia­n family from the east Jerusalem home in which they lived for over half a century, making way for Israelis deemed the legal occupants.

Plans for the eviction had been criticised by the European Union, United Nations and various Western government­s, though not the United States.

Fahamiya Shamasneh, 75, said police arrived unannounce­d before dawn and forced her out of the house along with her husband Ayoub, 84, their son and his family.

The couple had lived in the house in the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourh­ood of east Jerusalem near the historic Old City for 53 years.

“It is the hardest day,” Fahamiya Shamasneh said tearfully on the street after being evicted. She said she was heating milk for her grandchild­ren when “they knocked on the door and said ‘open its the police’.

“They took us out and threw us outside. “What greater injustice is there than this? Maybe we will sleep in the street.”

The United Nations agency for Palestinia­n refugees, UNRWA, said it would seek to support the family financiall­y to find another home.

The Shamasnehs had for years been fighting a court battle against Jewish claimants who said the building was their family property, which they fled when east Jerusalem was occupied by Jordanian troops in the 1948 war that led to

What greater injustice is there than this? maybe we will sleep in the street Fahamiya Shamasneh

the creation of the Jewish state.

Under Israeli law, if Jews can prove their families lived in east Jerusalem homes before the 1948 war they can demand that Israel’s general custodian office release the property and return their “ownership rights”.

During that war, thousands of Jews fled Jerusalem as Jordanianl­ed Arab forces seized the city, while hundreds of thousands of Palestinia­ns fled from land that was later to become Israel.

No such law exists for Palestinia­ns who lost their land. The Shamasnehs say they had paid 250 shekels ($70) a month to the general custodian since 1967, an arrangemen­t used by the settlers’ side as proof that the family acknowledg­ed its status as tenants.

In 2013 the Israeli Supreme Court ruled in favour of the Jewish claimants. Tuesday’s eviction was the first in the neighbourh­ood since 2009, according to Israeli anti-occupation group Peace Now.

Israel sees Jerusalem as its undivided capital, while the Palestinia­ns want the eastern sector as their future capital.

Israel occupied east Jerusalem in the Six-Day War of 1967 and later annexed it in a move never recognised by the internatio­nal community. Around 200,000 Israeli Jews now live in east Jerusalem in settlement homes considered illegal under internatio­nal law.

Scott Anderson, head of UNRWA’s West Bank operations, said such expulsions made peace between Israelis and Palestinia­ns harder to achieve.

“We all support the two-state solution and a negotiated peace process. The expansion of settlement­s is not helpful to that end,” he said.

Peace Now says the house is part of a larger process of establishi­ng settlement­s in Sheikh Jarrah.

“The eviction of the Shamasneh family, who resided in the house since 1964, is not only brutal but it is also indicating a dangerous trend that could threaten a future compromise in Jerusalem,” the Israeli NGO said in a statement. —

 ?? AFP ?? Israeli policemen stand guard as they evict the Shamasneh family from their home, in which they lived for over half a century, in the Arab neighbourh­ood of Sheikh Jarrah in east Jerusalem. —
AFP Israeli policemen stand guard as they evict the Shamasneh family from their home, in which they lived for over half a century, in the Arab neighbourh­ood of Sheikh Jarrah in east Jerusalem. —
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