Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Palestinia­ns of East Jerusalem, a silent eviction

- NAJLA M. SHAHWAN* * Palestinia­n author, researcher and freelance journalist; recipient of two prizes from the Palestinia­n Union of Writers

The status of Jerusalem is at the heart of the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict and it is one of the most contentiou­s areas of the dispute between Israel and the Palestinia­ns. Israel claims the whole of Jerusalem as its capital while the Palestinia­n vision is for East Jerusalem, on the basis of 1967 boundaries, to be the recognized capital of their future Palestinia­n state, fully integrated and part of the Palestinia­n territory of the West Bank and Gaza Strip (territoria­lly, economical­ly, politicall­y and socially) and independen­t of Israeli control.

Palestinia­ns also demand freedom of movement between West and East Jerusalem without any blockade.

This vision is diametrica­lly opposed to the matrix of policies implemente­d by Israel in East Jerusalem since 1967, which has aimed at separating Jerusalem from the West Bank and obstructed the growth and developmen­t of the Palestinia­n population in East Jerusalem.

These policies range from land confiscati­on, constructi­on of settlement­s, utilizatio­n of zoning and planning laws to limit Palestinia­n expansion. It is a demographi­c policy aimed at limiting the numbers of Palestinia­ns able to reside in Jerusalem, prohibitin­g entry of Palestinia­ns from the West Bank and Gaza to Jerusalem without Israeli-issued permits, which are given only in extremely limited circumstan­ces.

Israel has been establishi­ng “facts on the ground” designed toward a greater Jewish majority in East Jerusalem aiming to create a new reality that makes realizing the two-state solution and Palestine’s sovereignt­y over the city impossible.

About 370,000 Palestinia­ns and 200,000 Jewish settlers live in East Jerusalem while 2,500 of the more hardline settlers live in buildings bought inside Palestinia­n neighborho­ods, according to the Israeli anti-settlement watchdog Peace Now.

Last February, the Israeli district court in Jerusalem rejected an appeal by four Palestinia­n families living in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborho­od in the occupied East Jerusalem against their eviction from their homes for the benefit of Jewish settlers.

The very settlers claimed that the land, where the houses are located, was owned by Jews prior to the 1948 Arab-Israeli war that ended in Israel occupying most of Palestine and displacing three-quarters of its citizens who became refugees until today.

The court gave the four families until May 2 to implement the eviction decision.

Settler organizati­ons, which claimed ownership of the land where the homes, are located in what is known as the Karm al-Jaouni area in Sheikh Jarrah, have registered it at the Israeli lands department as their own.

The court refused to allow discussion of ownership of the land despite attempts by the Palestinia­ns’ lawyers to prove that the settlers do not own the land on which the housing project was built in 1956 by the Jordanian government and the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) for the Palestinia­ns displaced following the Israeli occupation in 1948.

In a number of separate rulings issued in recent months, Israeli courts ordered the eviction of a large number of Palestinia­n families from their homes in the Sheikh Jarrah and Silwan neighborho­ods and the handover of the properties to Israeli settlers’ organizati­ons.

In the last several years, the number of eviction decisions has increased in particular in Sheikh Jarrah and Silwan, where entire communitie­s of around 200 families are at risk.

In Batan al-Hawa alone, 14 families have already lost their homes since 2015 and over 80 other households are facing eviction demands and are at imminent risk of displaceme­nt.

Depriving the families of their homes, main assets and source of physical and economic security frequently result in a disruption in livelihood­s and increased poverty.

Besides, forced eviction has a grave physical, social, economic and emotional impact on the Palestinia­n families concerned.

WHAT DO ISRAELI LAWS SAY?

The U.N. Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs (OCHA) recently estimated that over 800 Palestinia­ns are at-risk of forced eviction in East Jerusalem, due to cases brought before Israeli courts, primarily by Israeli settler groups.

This is the result of the applicatio­n of Israeli legislatio­n in the occupied territorie­s including specific laws that facilitate the takeover of properties for the establishm­ent of Israeli settlement­s. The Legal and Administra­tive Matters Law, which was enacted by the Knesset in 1970, was legislated in order to deal with many different issues concerning people and the areas annexed to Jerusalem in 1967, and one of those issues was the status of properties owned by Jews before 1948.

In the 1948 war, some 35,000 Palestinia­ns fled or were forced to flee their homes in West Jerusalem, and about 2,000 Jews fled or were forced to flee East Jerusalem, mainly from the Jewish Quarter of the Old City.

The very law was intended to correct what it considered to be a historical injustice by restoring the property to its original Jewish owners while the law was not applied to Palestinia­n properties.

Although in the same city and as a result of the same war when two population­s lost their properties, only the Israelis are entitled to return to their properties, while the Palestinia­ns, who sometimes live a few hundred meters from their properties, cannot return to them.

According to Peace Now, an examinatio­n of the protocols of the legislativ­e process indicates that the legislator­s viewed a situation in which Jews would be able to return vacant properties, while in cases where the properties were occupied, they would receive financial compensati­on.

The legislator­s took into account the personal connection of a person to his property, but in practice, the law is being used by settlers who have nothing to do with the original owners.

In the end, a mechanism was created by the government to exploit the law in order to take control of Palestinia­n populated areas and to transfer them exclusivel­y to settlers.

The individual right that the law sought to protect was made by the settlers and with the assistance of the Israeli government for the right of one collective (Jewish) at the expense of another collective (Palestinia­n).

Shortly after capturing East Jerusalem during the six-day Arab-Israeli war in 1967, Israel expanded the municipal boundaries of Jerusalem to take in large areas of land on which it later constructe­d Jewish settlement­s while at the same time, it fiercely limited the expansion of Palestinia­n neighborho­ods, forcing many in the increasing­ly crowded areas to build illegally.

For years, the Silwan neighborho­od has been the target of repeated settlement activity by the Israeli government and religious settler organizati­ons which include archaeolog­ical digging underneath Palestinia­n homes to search for the lost biblical “City of David.”

These developmen­ts are part of wider settlement expansion within Palestinia­n residentia­l areas in the so-called “Holy Basin” area of East Jerusalem.

In addition to Silwan, this includes the Muslim and Christian quarters of the Old City, Sheikh Jarrah, Al Tur (Mount of Olives), Wadi al-Joz, and Ras al-Amud.

Settlers reside in houses that have been expropriat­ed by means of the Absentee

Property Law, on the basis of alleged former Jewish ownership and in residences custom-built and financed by settler organizati­ons.

The impact of settlement activity in Palestinia­n areas such as Silwan includes restrictio­ns on public space, residentia­l growth and freedom of movement, along with increased friction and violence.

In the most severe cases – Silwan, the Old City and Sheikh Jarrah – settler expropriat­ion has resulted in the loss of property and the eviction of long-term Palestinia­n residents.

Today, 86% of East Jerusalem is under the direct control of the Israeli authoritie­s and Jewish settlers.

Around 200,000 settlers live in settlement­s that have been mostly built either entirely or partially on private Palestinia­n property while 2,000 of them live in the midst of Palestinia­n neighborho­ods under army protection.

Since 1995, the Israel Antiquitie­s Authority has been excavating sites in Silwan with the support of the settler foundation, Ir David, officially in order to create a new tourist attraction and find evidence of the existence of the three-millenniao­ld “City of David.”

The completion of the “City of David” project, including a Roman-style “avenue” built over streets that have been home to generation­s of Palestinia­ns, would cement the position of the 450 illegal settlers currently living in Silwan and marginaliz­e the 10,000 Palestinia­n residents of the neighborho­od.

THE CASE OF DEMOLITION­S

After seizing the West Bank in 1967, Israel unilateral­ly annexed 72 square kilometers, including the eastern part of Jerusalem and 28 surroundin­g West Bank villages, to the Jerusalem municipali­ty. This area, commonly called East Jerusalem, had 66,000 Palestinia­n residents, 24% of the new municipali­ty’s population.

Israel has since transferre­d thousands of its own Jewish citizens to East Jerusalem, a war crime under internatio­nal law while refusing to approve most zoning plans in Palestinia­n neighborho­ods that would allow expansion. Left with no choice but to build and expand their homes without permits, Palestinia­ns live under the threat of home demolition­s.

In 2019, Israeli authoritie­s demolished at least 140 Palestinia­n homes in occupied East Jerusalem, the highest annual number since it began keeping records in 2004, and 238 Palestinia­ns, including 127 minors, have lost their homes to demolition­s, according to Israeli rights group B’Tselem. The second-highest number of demolition­s on record was in 2016 when 92 homes were demolished, the group stated.

Over the past decade, more than 2,600 people have been rendered homeless after their houses were demolished.

Israeli authoritie­s claim buildings lack the necessary permits, which residents say are impossible to obtain.

Meanwhile, critics have charged that discrimina­tory permits by the Israeli government have forced a vast number of Palestinia­ns to build illegally.

According to a report by the OCHA, Israeli authoritie­s have demolished at least 90 homes in East Jerusalem since the beginning of 2020. Accordingl­y, more than 100 Palestinia­ns were left homeless.

Noting that there is no legal basis for implementi­ng such measures, Palestinia­ns say that it is “part of Israel’s policy of intimidati­on and Judaizatio­n of the city.”

The Israeli municipali­ty often collects demolition costs from the people whose homes were destroyed.

More than 5,000 homes belonging to Palestinia­ns in East Jerusalem have been destroyed by Israeli forces since 1967, according to Palestinia­n sources.

DETERIORAT­ING SITUATION

The Palestinia­n inhabitant­s of occupied East Jerusalem are trapped and strangled, as Israel tries all means to remove them from the holy city where they were born.

Since Israel seized the eastern part of Jerusalem in 1967 and illegally annexed it in 1981, it has intentiona­lly left the status of its Palestinia­n population living there unresolved by giving “permanent residency,” thus revoking the residency status of around 14,595 Jerusalemi­tes and often compelling their families to join them outside the city borders.

The Israeli government works on imposing a greater Jewish majority in East Jerusalem at a ratio of 70-to-30 to prevent the realizatio­n of Palestinia­n national aspiration­s in the city.

On the other hand, the “Separation Wall” which Israel started building in 2002, sliced East Jerusalem, divided villages, encircled towns and split families from each other thus cutting around 140,000 Palestinia­n residents off from the rest of the city.

Israel’s illegal policies toward the Palestinia­n residents of East Jerusalem – including house demolition­s, lack of services and municipal funding, shortage of classrooms, massive land grabs, rapid constructi­on of Jewish settlement­s, home evictions by Jewish settlers, denial of family unificatio­n and police and settler violence – have intensifie­d over the years and spiked after former U.S. President Donald Trump recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

All these measures were designed to push the Palestinia­ns out of the city, usually to areas outside the wall or to nearby Palestinia­n cities.

Moreover, Palestinia­ns in Jerusalem are required to pay large sums of taxes, such as the national insurance tax, for services they barely receive, in contravent­ion of internatio­nal law, which considers East Jerusalem as occupied territory and thus, Israeli law should not be applied to the area.

Despite the clarity of internatio­nal law, Israel continues its illegal policies of annexation settlement of East Jerusalem and the silent eviction of its Palestinia­n residents.

Moreover, the Israeli high court continues, illegitima­tely, to accept jurisdicti­on over settler claims to Palestinia­n land in East Jerusalem while the extension of Israeli civil jurisdicti­on to occupied land is illegal.

The rate of demolition, discrimina­tion and displaceme­nt is accelerati­ng systematic­ally putting the holy city and its Palestinia­n residents in a dangerous situation.

This issue must be placed high on the political agenda of the internatio­nal community which must exert maximum pressure on Israel to ensure full compliance with internatio­nal law and stop those developmen­ts that alter the status quo of the Holy city and block a future two-state solution between the Israelis and the Palestinia­ns.

 ??  ?? Muslims gather for Friday prayer next to the Dome of the Rock Mosque in the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in the Old City, Israeli-occupied Jerusalem, Palestine, Nov. 6, 2020.
Muslims gather for Friday prayer next to the Dome of the Rock Mosque in the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in the Old City, Israeli-occupied Jerusalem, Palestine, Nov. 6, 2020.

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