What is going on in Jerusalem's Sheikj Harrah neighbourhood?
Dozens of Palestinians are facing imminent dispossession from their homes in the occupied East Jerusalem neighbourhood of Sheikh Jarrah, in what they say is a move to force them out and replace it entirely with a Jewish settlement.
The Jerusalem District Court ruled at least six families must
vacate their homes in Sheikh Jarrah on Sunday, despite living there for
generations.
The same court ruled seven other families should leave their homes
by August 1. In total, 58 people, including 17 children, are set to be forcibly
displaced to make way for Jewish settlers.
The court rulings are a culmination of a decades-long struggle for
these Palestinians to stay in their homes. In 1972, several Jewish settler
organisations filed a lawsuit against the Palestinian families living in Sheikh
Jarrah, alleging the land originally belonged to Jews.
These groups, mostly funded by donors from the United States, have
waged a relentless battle that resulted in the displacement of 43 Palestinians
in 2002, as well as the Hanoun and Ghawi families in 2008 and the Shamasneh
family in 2017.
What is the story of Karm al-Jaouni in Sheikh Jarrah?
In 1956, 28 Palestinian refugee families displaced from their homes in the
coastal cities of Yafa and Haifa eight years prior eventually settled into the
Karm al-Jaouni area in Sheikh Jarrah.
The West Bank, including East Jerusalem, at the time was under the mandate
of Jordan, which struck an agreement with the UN agency for refugees (UNRWA) to
build housing units for these families. The deal stipulated the families were
to renounce their refugee status in return for land deeds signed in their names
after three years of living in the area.
However, that did not take place and in 1967 Jordan lost its mandate as
East Jerusalem was occupied by Israel.
Khalil Toufakji, a Palestinian cartographer and expert on Jerusalem, said
he travelled to Ankara in 2010 to search in the Ottoman-era archives for a
document that negates any Jewish ownership of Karm al-Jaouni.
“I found the deed and presented it to the Israeli district court, which
promptly rejected it,” After more digging, Toufakji found out in 1968 that
Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, issued a decree – signed by the finance
minister at the time – which stated Israel was bound to the Jordan-UNRWA
agreement.
“This fact is what has been raised to the Jerusalem High Court on behalf of
the Palestinian families in Sheikh Jarrah,” he said, but added there is little
reason to believe the court will rule in favour of them. “Israeli courts –
judge, jury and legislation – are all in the service of the Jewish settlers,”
he said.
How do Palestinians see the role of the Israeli courts?
Under international law, the Israeli judicial system has no legal authority
over the population it occupies.
Last month, an appeal by
Palestinian human rights groups to the UN Special Procedures said Israel’s
discriminatory legal foundation “provides the basis for its creation of an
apartheid regime over the Palestinian people as a whole”.
“Not only has Israel unlawfully extended its domestic civil legal system to
occupied East Jerusalem, but proceeded to enact more discriminatory laws and
policies that enforce the confiscation of Palestinian property in East
Jerusalem in favour of settlers, the forcible transfer of Palestinians, and the
expansion of Israeli-Jewish presence in the city,” the appeal said.
Fayrouz Sharqawi, global mobilisation director for Grassroots Jerusalem,
previously said that it is “absurd” to count on the Israeli judicial system to
protect Palestinian rights.
“This system is an integral part of the Zionist colonial state, which
identifies as a ‘Jewish state’ and accordingly and systematically oppresses,
dispossesses and displaces Palestinians,” she said.
What has been the response of Jordan?
On Thursday, Jordan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said it handed over 14
official documents related to building the housing units in Sheikh Jarrah to
the Palestinian Authority (PA).
The documents show the development ministry at the time entered into an agreement
with the UNRWA to build 28 housing units for the Palestinian refugee families.
The official spokesman for the ministry, Daifallah al-Fayez, said in
a statement that Jordan is committed to providing
all possible backing to the Palestinians living in Sheikh Jarrah.
“Keeping Palestinian Jerusalemites rooted in their land is a national
principle in Jordan’s efforts to support our Palestinian brethren,” he said.
According to Zakariah Odeh, the director of the Civic Coalition for
Palestinian Rights in Jerusalem, Jordan should exert more effort to safeguard
the current and future situation for the Karm al-Jaouni families.
“Jordan does hold responsibility in resolving this issue, as these
Palestinian families carried out their end of the agreement, which was to give
up their refugee status,” he said.
“There are plans to build 255 settlement units in place of the Palestinian
homes,” he continued. “Jordan owes it to the dozens of families who are threatened
with displacement and should intervene on a political and diplomatic level.”
Israel’s annexation of East Jerusalem is largely not
recognised by the international community.
Israel’s settlement project, which is aimed at the consolidation of
Israel’s control over the city, is also considered illegal under international
law.
About 200,000 Israeli citizens live in East Jerusalem under army and police
protection, with the largest single settlement complex housing 44,000 Israelis.
“Sheikh Jarrah is but one example of what is happening to Palestinian
neighbourhoods in Jerusalem regarding forced displacement,” Odeh said.
“Last year was the highest rate of settlement expansion in the East
Jerusalem on record – about 4,500 units. The year 2020 also saw 170 Palestinian
structures demolished, including 105 homes, which resulted in the displacement
of 385 people.”
According to Toufakji, the Israeli policies of arrests, demolishment of
structures, land confiscation and forced displacement are all in accordance
with the Israeli government’s “demographic balance” in Jerusalem at a 70-30,
limiting the Palestinian population in the city to 30 percent or less.
“This plan has been in place since 1973, when then
prime minister Golda Meir gave the green light to the Gavni Committee to
achieve this ratio,” he said.
“And in 1990, Ariel Sharon – who was the minister of housing construction
at the time – set in motion the plans to build settlement blocs right in the
middle of Palestinian neighbourhoods in Jerusalem, in order to encircle,
fragment and disperse the Palestinian residents.”
Odeh said all of these policies are in line with Israel’s so-called
“Greater Jerusalem” plan, which aims to cut off the surrounding Palestinian
neighbourhoods of East Jerusalem from the city by way of the separation barrier
and annexing surrounding Jewish settlements.
“As a result, some 140,000 Palestinian Jerusalemites live outside the
separation barrier, and cannot access the city,” he said. “The past year also
saw the approval of expanding existing settlements in occupied East Jerusalem
such as Givat Hamatos on Beit Safafa lands and [Har Homa] settlement on Jabal
Abu Ghneim in the south near Beit Sahour,” Odeh continued.
Several Palestinian neighbourhoods in East Jerusalem are also facing the
threat of forced displacement.
“The al-Bustan area in Silwan, which is south of the Old City, has 119
families in 88 buildings that are under threat of demolishment to make way for
an Israeli archaeological park,” Odeh said.
“In Wadi Yasul, 84 homes are also under threat of demolishment to make way
for expansion of an Israeli national park. And in Batan al-Hawa, 700 people are
slated to be forcibly displaced because the Ateret Cohanim settler group said
Jews used to live there before.”
Last February, 22-year-old Mohammed el-Kurd, whose family faces
displacement on Sunday, managed to successfully lobby 81 UK lawmakers,
including Jeremy Corbyn, to sign a letter
regarding the situation in Sheikh Jarrah.
In April, at least 190 organisations wrote a letter to the prosecutor of
the International Criminal Court, urging her to investigate the imminent forced
displacement of families in Sheikh Jarrah as part of her continuing
investigation into war crimes and crimes against humanity in Palestine.
In the past few weeks, the hashtag in English and Arabic #SaveSheikhJarrah has been circulating on
social media, aimed at raising awareness and piquing interest on a grassroots
and official level at the imminent displacements.
Palestinian activists have called on international leaders and advocates to
pressure Israel to end what they say is Sheikh Jarrah’s “ongoing Nakba”.
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