Injustice served
A Palestinian family were forcibly evicted from their home in occupied East Jerusalem by Israeli police on Wednesday after a court ruled in favour of an Israeli group that helps to settle Jews in Palestinian areas.
The City of David Foundation, also called Elad after its Hebrew acronym, had been battling the Siyam family in court for 30 years over control of their home in Silwan, near Jerusalem’s Old City. The Israeli government calls the neighbourhood the City of David after the biblical king, who was said to have lived there.
Elad has bought up parts of the property from members of the family and acquired it through Israeli courts using mechanisms such as an absentee property law that human rights groups say is structured to disadvantage Palestinians and penalise those living abroad by taking away their property ownership. The last straw in the Siyam case was a court ruling last month that found that because the organisation had acquired three fourths of the ownership of the property, the remaining tenant, Elham Siyam, must leave.
An Israeli court rejected an appeal and also ordered that Ms Siyam, a single mother of four, and her family should pay nearly US$3,000 in legal fees to Elad.
One of the extended family members is Jawad Siyam, a prominent Silwan activist.
“The story of Silwan properties is a David and Goliath story,” said left-wing Israeli NGO Peace Now in a statement.
“An NGO rich in resources uses the best lawyers to file lengthy, exhausting lawsuits against hard-up Palestinian families. These families have to spend a lot of money to try to protect their home and to pay lawyers and experts for expensive legal proceedings, at the end of which they are also required to pay court costs.
“The Custodian of Absentee Property is helping the settlers take control of the homes.”
The case comes soon after United States ambassador to Israel David Friedman inaugurated a new City of David Foundation project in Silwan. Palestinians criticised the US diplomat’s move as another sign of US support for Israeli sovereignty over the disputed city of Jerusalem.
On Monday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed not to disband any Israeli settlements in a statement at a ceremony honouring the anniversary of a council in the occupied West Bank.
“We will not allow any community in Israel to be uprooted,” he said. “No communities will be uprooted. Not those of Jews, and by the way, not those of Arabs. We’re through with that nonsense.”
At the event, Yossi Dagan, the head of the Samaria Regional Council, which represents a bloc of West Bank settlements considered illegal under international law, said that now is the time to “extend sovereignty on Judea and Samaria”. Samaria is the biblical term for the West Bank used by the Israeli government.
“Not just over the communities that make up only 3 per cent of the territory, but on the empty lands and state lands … that await Jewish settlement.”
Before the general election in April, Mr Netanyahu vowed to annex parts of the West Bank if he won.
He was unable to form a government and Israel will face new elections in September, for which he will need to secure the vote of his right-wing base.