Palestinian family protests east Jerusalem home eviction

The municipality said the property is to be used to build the school, which is to served Palestinian children in the neighbourhood.Sheikh Jarrah is an east Jerusalem neighbourhood where dozens of longtime Palestinian residents are battling efforts by Jewish settlers to evict them from their homes.


PTI | Jerusalem | Updated: 17-01-2022 18:16 IST | Created: 17-01-2022 18:06 IST
Palestinian family protests east Jerusalem home eviction
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  • Israel

Palestinian residents of a flashpoint east Jerusalem neighborhood held a tense standoff with Israeli authorities on Monday as police came to evict them from a disputed property.

Several residents of a home in Sheikh Jarrah climbed onto the roof of the building with gas tanks and threatened to set them alight should the Jerusalem municipality follow through with the eviction. Residents say they purchased the property before 1967, when Israel captured east Jerusalem, while the state has argued in court that the family does not have rights to the property. The Jerusalem Municipality formally seized the property in 2017 to build a special needs school. A Jerusalem court ruled last year in favor of the city and authorized the eviction. The family has appealed and is awaiting a ruling, but the judge did not freeze the eviction order. City Hall and the police issued a joint statement saying the court ordered the family to vacate the property a year ago. The municipality said the property is to be used to build the school, which is to serve Palestinian children in the neighborhood.

Sheikh Jarrah is an East Jerusalem neighborhood where dozens of longtime Palestinian residents are battling efforts by Jewish settlers to evict them from their homes. That case, which has been in Israel's Supreme Court for months, has drawn global attention and fueled last year's Israeli-Palestinian violence. Palestinians in east Jerusalem tend to live in poor, neglected neighborhoods and struggle to get permits and paperwork from City Hall. They accuse Israel of trying to push them out of Jerusalem.

Omer Barlev, the Israeli Cabinet minister in charge of police, said the government faced a no-win situation.

“You can't have it both ways — to demand that the municipality act for the welfare of the Arab residents, and also to oppose the construction of educational institutions for their welfare,” he wrote on Twitter.

But Ir Amim, an Israeli rights group that follows developments in Jerusalem, said that in recent years the city gave up a different plot of land in Sheikh Jarrah originally designated for a Palestinian school and instead authorized construction of an ultra-Orthodox men's seminary.

“The municipality appears to perceive it as reasonable and fit to dispossess a Palestinian family for the sake of a school rather than utilizing open land initially allocated for such purposes,” it said.

Israel captured east Jerusalem, along with the West Bank and Gaza Strip, in the 1967 Mideast war. It later annexed the eastern half of the city — home to most of Jerusalem's Palestinian population — in a move unrecognized by most of the international community. The Palestinians seek east Jerusalem as the capital of a future state.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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