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The man who sold Jerusalem

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  • The man who sold Jerusalem

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    The man who sold Jerusalem
    X-Sender: Asbed Bedrossian <[email protected]>
    X-Listprocessor-Version: 8.1 -- ListProcessor(tm) by CREN

    The secret sale of a priceless plot of land in the
    Holy City has threatened the fragile balance between
    the religions. Donald Macintyre reports on the Greek
    Orthodox priest accused of selling out his Palestinian
    flock for Israeli gold.

    The Independent (UK)
    10 May 2005

    These are tense times for Abu Walid Dijani, proprietor
    of the New Imperial Hotel. The Arab hotel, one of the
    oldest in Jerusalem despite its name, has been at the
    centre of the city's turbulent history many times,
    thanks to its strategic location just inside the Jaffa
    Gate,.

    >From a balcony here in December 1917, General Edmund
    Allenby looked across Omar Ibn al Khattab square after
    dismounting his horse outside the walls and entering
    the Old City on foot to mark its liberation from the
    Turks.

    In the 1950s and 1960s, the hotel housed a small
    cinema, and its elegant ballroom was a favourite
    Palestinian wedding venue. In 1967, during the Six-Day
    War, it was occupied and used as a base by Israeli
    troops, then returned to the Dijani family, the
    tenants of the property, which is owned by the Greek
    Orthodox Church. But during more than a century the
    old hotel has never faced a greater threat.

    For it is at the centre of an international scandal
    which has infuriated the Greek government and may yet
    help sabotage the chances of a comprehensive peace
    settlement to the Israeli- Palestinian conflict. It
    has also fuelled local demands from the Church's angry
    flock of 200,000 for the Greek hierarchy to be
    replaced, as in other Christian communities, by Arab
    prelates.

    Irineos I, the beleaguered Greek Orthodox Patriarch -
    or as his most senior bishops have repeatedly referred
    to him since an unprecedented meeting of the Synod
    voted to depose him last Friday, the "ex-patriarch" -
    is accused of being behind a secret and politically
    explosive property deal.

    Under it, three large buildings on the north side of
    Omar Ibn al Khattab square have been made over by
    198-year leases - to all intents and purposes sold -
    to a group of as yet anonymous Jewish investors. What
    makes the deal so politically radioactive is its
    potential to alter the delicate ethnic and religious
    balance of the Old City.

    The shops, the Imperial and the Petra hotel, are just
    inside the Jaffa Gate, at what is the most popular
    entry-point, but also the junction of the Christian,
    Muslim and Armenian quarters. Under the "Clinton
    parameters", laid down at Camp David in 2000, the
    Christian and Muslim sectors were to fall within
    Palestinian control, on the principle that what was
    Arab would be Palestinian, part of a new Palestinian
    capital of East Jerusalem, and what was Jewish,
    Israeli. Any peace deal would have to ensure secure
    access for Jews seeking to enter the Jewish quarter
    and to pray at the Wailing Wall.

    But a Jewish foothold, and there is a widespread
    presumption in the Old City that settler organisations
    passionately devoted to the idea of an "undivided and
    eternal" Jerusalem as the Israeli capital are involved
    in the purchase, on the north, indisputably Arab, side
    of the square would create a new and dramatic Jewish
    "fact on the ground", calling into question the Arab
    character of the quarter and torpedoing Bill Clinton's
    stipulation for "maximum contiguity" in the then
    existing sectors in Jerusalem.

    Mr Diwani, whose father, Mohammed, took a "protected"
    tenancy" of the hotel from the Church in 1949, was by
    his own wildly understated account, "surprised" when
    he read in the Israeli newspaper Maariv in March about
    the transaction. But he has been aware for a long time
    of the intense interest of Jewish figures in the site
    .

    About 18 months ago, he says, a pleasantly spoken
    American aged about 70, "Jewish but without a kippa",
    says Mr Dijani, turned up unannounced and asked the
    proprietor to spare 10 minutes to show him round. As
    they paused on the second floor, "He looked me in the
    eyes and said, 'How much do you need for me to buy you
    out?' I smiled and said I have never thought of this
    question. He said, 'How can a man like you go to sleep
    without thinking of a price'?" But Mr Dijani politely
    insisted his tenancy was not for sale in such
    circumstances and his visitor left.

    When the story broke in the Israeli press - possibly
    leaked to "soften up" public opinion about the secret
    $130m deal - Mr Dijani sought an audience with the
    Patriarch. He says his family had long enjoyed warm
    relations with the patriarchate. But even in a Church
    frequently riven by scandal and intrigue, Irineos is a
    controversial figure.

    Paradoxically, Israel refused to recognise him for
    three years after his election in 2001 because of his
    perceived alliance with the Palestinian Authority, and
    Yasser Arafat, in particular. But its grudging
    decision to do so in 2004 was this year overturned by
    an Israeli court on the grounds that Irineos had won
    his election with the help of criminal figures from
    Greece, including Apostolos Vavilis, a convicted
    heroin trafficker.

    Vavilis has also been the central figure in Greek
    criminal investigations as an associate of Archbishop
    Christodoulos, head of the Church in Greece, who has
    himself been engulfed in a scandal over reports
    accusing his clergy of engaging in the illegal trade
    in antiquities, trial-fixing and sexual misconduct.

    In an interview while still on the run, Vavilis
    claimed that Irineos had offered him $400,000 to run a
    dirty-tricks campaign against his two main electoral
    rivals but had failed to pay up. In an atmosphere in
    which rumours about homosexuality among the Greek
    clergy are rife, the dirty tricks supposedly included
    unfounded allegations against rivals, and the wholly
    baseless assertion that the Patriarch's main opponent,
    Archbishop Timotheos, had hired a Palestinian hitman
    to assassinate him.

    Before the Jerusalem patriarch was recognised by Ariel
    Sharon's cabinet, he entrusted the financial affairs
    of the Church to the patriarchate's financial manager
    Nicholas Papadimas, apparently granting him power of
    attorney. Mr Papadimas has disappeared after facing
    allegations about at least $700,000 reportedly missing
    from church accounts. The Patriarch told Greek
    government officials that the financial manager had
    forged documents and abused his authority to sell a
    shop in Jaffa Gate.

    Mr Papadimas, also undeterred by his fugitive status
    from publicising his own version of events, has been
    quoted in the Greek and Israeli press as saying the
    Jaffa Gate transactions were authorised by Irineos.
    The newspaper Haaretz said Mr Papadimas claimed the
    Patriarch had done it to ingratiate himself with the
    Israeli authorities.

    Mr Dijani says when he visited the Patriarch, he asked
    him: "Your Beatitude, why don't you say, 'I have made
    a mistake and ask the whole world to stand by me'?"
    When the cleric repeated his denials, Mr Dijani says
    he said: "But you gave [Mr Papadimas] the power of
    attorney."

    Irineos' position was not helped when investigators
    sent last month by an increasingly worried Greek
    Government failed to come up with a convincing
    explanation. "From all the pieces of evidence
    requested, only a few were given to us," their
    official report said. "In themselves, they were not
    helpful or informative enough for our case."

    Although the Israeli courts have not always fully
    upheld the cover afforded by a protected tenancy, Mr
    Dijani still represents a possible obstacle to a
    complete takeover of the hotel. He suggests there
    might have been three possible scenarios. "One was
    that the deal gave ample time to the patriarchate to
    buy me out after a while; the second was they would be
    very patient. The protected tenancy lasts for three
    generations and they would have to wait until after my
    grandsons had run the hotel. But that would be a very
    long wait. And the third would be that they would
    bring all sorts of pressure on me to leave this
    place."

    The last might be especially true if, as some Israeli
    commentators, lawyers, along with ecclesiastical
    sources have freely speculated that the Israeli
    government is, even indirectly, behind the deal. The
    sum is certainly larger than usually employed by
    settler groups. The Israeli authorities categorically
    deny any part in the transaction.

    But there is a precedent. In the early 1990s, the
    patriarchy, the biggest ecclesiastical landowner in
    the country and owner of perhaps 20 percent of the Old
    City, sold St John's Hospice, close to the Church of
    the Holy Sepulchre, to settler interests in a deal
    which turned out to have been financed by the Housing
    Ministry, acting through a foreign company and on the
    orders of the then minister, David Levy.

    Either way, the patriarchate is now locked in what is
    surely the deepest crisis in its 16-century history.
    Irineos left the patriarchate after the synod meeting
    which his dwindling band of supporters insist was not
    properly constituted, and returned under Israeli
    police guard early on Saturday morning to his
    residence, from where he has continued to insist he
    remains as patriarch, in defiance of his most senior
    colleagues. Last night he was summoned to Istanbul by
    the spiritual leader of the world's Orthodox
    Christians, the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I,
    for urgent discussions.

    But in the end, the future of the Patriarch may be
    less important than that of the property deal made on
    his watch. As Dimitri Dilani, of the National
    Christian Coalition, a Palestinian pressure group in
    the church which is also critical of the Palestinian
    Authority for not having withdrawn its recognition of
    Irineos before, put it: "We have won a battle but we
    are a long way from winning the war. We need the land
    returned and the fate of the money established."

    Last Saturday, in the crowded offices of the
    patriarchate, the senior prelates seemed
    euphoric-almost light-headed about their courage in
    voting to disown him the evening before. But
    Archbishop Alexios of Gaza, for example, was almost
    casually dismissive about the prospect of unstitching
    a deal with huge regional implications. "Of course,
    what has happened is a dark moment for the
    patriarchate," he said. "But this can't be cancelled.
    An official thing has taken place."

    Archbishop Timotheos, widely seen as the mastermind
    behind Friday's palace coup, said: "Our Israeli
    friends should understand that we haven't voted
    against them but against the behaviour of the
    Patriarch who did all these things in a secret way."

    Asked if attempts would be made by the dissidents to
    anull the deal, the archbishop said he could not
    discuss "political matters" until after the elections
    he said would be soon, to replace the Patriarch. For
    all Israel's protestations about not interfering in
    the internal affairs of the patriarchate, its power to
    give, or deny, recognition to a patriarch cannot fail
    to exercise an influence.

    The move to acquire the properties, prompting the fear
    among many Christians in the Old City that the
    settlers may soon arrive to occupy them, is on a par
    with many other purchases, outside the Old City as
    well as inside it, which resulted in about 1,800
    settlers now in residence in various strategic points
    inside East Jerusalem neighbourhoods populated by
    230,000 Arabs.

    Like the expansion of Maale Adumim to join up with
    Jerusalem, the routing of the separation barrier
    outside the city and other developments appear
    calculated to head off the prospect of Jerusalem
    becoming the capital of a viable Palestinian state.
    And they appear to cut directly across Condoleezza
    Rice's warning this year to the Israeli government not
    to do anything that would pre-empt final status
    negotiations with the Palestinians on the city.

    Daniel Seidemann, the Israeli lawyer who has been
    monitoring, and opposing, such settlement activity in
    Jerusalem for years says any peace plan would now have
    to apply "microsurgery" to guarantee secure passage
    for Jews through the Armenian quarter to the south of
    the square, through to the Jewish quarter and the holy
    Wailing Wall. He adds: "All of a sudden the border
    becomes mobile. You have a settler presence. The
    people [who acquired the properties] here were not
    making a random hit."


    http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/story.jsp?story=637155
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