Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Israel steps up Jerusalem home demolition­s as violence rises

- By Isabel Debre

JERUSALEM >> Ratib Matar’s family was growing. They needed more space.

Before his granddaugh­ters, now 4 and 5, were born, he built three apartments on an eastern slope overlookin­g Jerusalem’s ancient landscape. The 50-year-old constructi­on contractor moved in with his brother, son, divorced daughter and their young kids — 11 people in all, plus a few geese.

But Matar was never at ease. At any moment, the Israeli code-enforcemen­t officers could knock on his door and take everything away.

That moment came on Jan. 29, days after a Palestinia­n gunman killed seven people in east Jerusalem, the deadliest attack in the contested capital since 2008. Israel’s new far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir called not only for the sealing of the assailant’s family home, but also the immediate demolition of dozens of Palestinia­n homes built without permits in east Jerusalem, among other punitive steps.

Mere hours after BenGvir’s comments, the first bulldozers rumbled into Matar’s neighborho­od of Jabal Mukaber.

For many Palestinia­ns, the gathering pace of home demolition­s is part of the new ultranatio­nalist government’s broader battle for control of east Jerusalem, captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war and claimed by the Palestinia­ns as the capital of a future independen­t state.

The battle is waged with building permits and demolition orders — and it is one the Palestinia­ns feel they cannot win. Israel says it is simply enforcing building regulation­s.

Last month, Israel demolished 39 Palestinia­n homes, structures and businesses in east Jerusalem, displacing over 50 people, according to the United Nations. That was more than a quarter of the total number of demolition­s in 2022.

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