Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Jerusalem orders Palestinian homes to be razed

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Jerusalem orders Palestinian homes to be razed

    Jerusalem orders Palestinian homes to be razed
    Chris McGreal in Jerusalem

    Saturday June 4, 2005
    The Guardian

    Jerusalem's city council has ordered one of the largest mass
    demolitions in the city's recent history, with plans to raze the
    homes of about 1,000 Palestinians in a neighbourhood claimed by Jewish
    settlers.The council says about 90 buildings served with demolition
    orders were built illegally over the last three decades on a site of
    religious and archaeological value just outside the Old City walls, and
    that they are being destroyed to restore the area as a national park.

    But Israeli human rights campaigners say the real intent is to forcibly
    remove Palestinians from an area, Silwan, that is an important link
    in the government's plan to encircle Arab East Jerusalem with Jewish
    settlements.

    Meir Margalit, a former city councillor leading opposition to the
    demolitions, said: "It will undermine a solution to the conflict,
    because the government is trying to make it impossible for East
    Jerusalem to be the Palestinian capital."

    The targeted houses make up the Al Bustan neighbourhood in Silwan,
    in an area the city council calls King's Valley because it was the
    site of King David's city.

    The demolitions were ordered by the city engineer, Uri Shetrit,
    in a letter last November but were kept under wraps until dozens of
    demolition orders went out in recent weeks.

    "This hill and its surrounding neighbourhood dates from 5,000 years
    ago," the letter says. "These remains have an international and
    national value and they give the city its status as one of the most
    valuable cities in the world."

    But the opposition leader on the council, Alalu Jose, said there was
    almost nothing left of King David's city: "I confronted Shetrit after
    he sent out the letter ordering the demolitions and said, 'This has
    nothing to do with archaeology or parks, it's all about politics.'"

    A controversial settler organisation, Elad, partially funded by the
    government, has already taken over more than 40 buildings in the area.

    Mr Margalit said: "There is a much bigger plan here, aimed at ensuring
    Israeli control of all of Jerusalem even after there is a Palestinian
    state."

    He acknowledged that many of the affected houses were built illegally,
    but says that was because of a council policy not to issue construction
    permits to Palestinians. The mayor of Jerusalem, Uri Lupolianski,
    has declined to comment publicly on the demolitions.

    Among those served with a demolition order is Mo hammed Badran, who
    says he was born in 1961 in the house the council now wants to raze.

    Mr Badran has papers from the British mandate era in the 20s that
    appear to show his grandfather owned the land where the house now
    stands.

    "I have been taxed on this house since the day they introduced it to
    East Jerusalem in 1973," he said. "If the house was illegal, why did
    they take the tax?"
Working...
X