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| Israelis, Internationals and Palestinians rebuild Gawi living space outside their occupied house.(ActiveStills) |
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50 Israeli and international supporters gathered today in Sheikh
Jarrah to help Palestinian residents rebuild the Gawi family tent after
it was demolished by police earlier in the day. The event, called by
neighborhood residents and ISM activists, created a sense of support,
solidarity and community in the face of high tension and repression by
authorities.
Two days earlier, Nasser Gawi was suspended from entering the
neighborhood for 15 days after a settler attacked a child, punched
Nasser, then cocked and pointed his M-16 assault rifle at a crowd of
Palestinians and internationals. The weapon was seized and the settler
was also expelled from Sheikh Jarrah for 15 days.
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| Gawi mother and child rebuild tent after being barred from their house since August 2009. (ActiveStills) |
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Then, in a blatant attempt to break the spirit of the displaced and
protesting residents, police raided and removed the living space of the
Gawi family. Local residents scrambled to remove personal belongings
before police confiscated the Gawi tent where the family has been
living since their forceful eviction in August of last year.
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| Resident watches as Gawi living space is confiscated. (ActiveStills) |
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This is the 12th confiscation of the Gawi living space. Previous
confiscations have also occurred after tension in the neighborhood
built and settler vs. Palestinian conflict occurred. This confiscation
was no different. Just a few hours after the tent was taken however,
family members and activists sleep soundly, sheltered from the elements
in a new tent rebuilt by a community of support.
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| The tent stands again.
(ActiveStills) |
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Report on altercation between settlers and neighborhood residents on 31 January 2010 including photo and video.
Background on Sheikh Jarrah
Approximately 475 Palestinian residents living in the Karm Al-Ja’ouni
neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, located directly north of the Old City,
face imminent eviction from their homes in the manner of the Hannoun
and Gawi families, and the al-Kurd family before them. All 28 families
are refugees from 1948, mostly from West Jerusalem and Haifa, whose
houses in Sheikh Jarrah were built and given to them through a joint
project between the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) and
the Jordanian government in 1956.
So far, settlers took over houses of four Palestinian families,
displacing around 60 residents, including 20 children. At present,
settlers occupy all these houses and the whole area is patrolled by
armed private security 24 hours a day. The evicted Palestinian
families, some of whom have been left without suitable alternative
accommodation since August, continue to protest against the unlawful
eviction from the sidewalk across the street from their homes, facing
regular violent attacks from the settlers and harassment from the
police.
The Gawi family, for example, had their only shelter, a small tent
built near their house, destroyed by the police and all their
belongings stolen five times. In addition, the al-Kurd family has been
forced to live in an extremely difficult situation, sharing the
entrance gate and the backyard of their house with extremist settlers,
who occupied a part of the al-Kurd home in December 2009. The settlers
subject the Palestinian family to regular violent attacks and
harassment, making their life a living hell.
The ultimate goal of the settler organizations is to evict all
Palestinians from the area and turn it into a new Jewish settlement and
to create a Jewish continuum that will effectively cut off the Old City
form the northern Palestinian neighborhoods. On 28 August 2008, Nahalat
Shimon International filed a plan to build a series of five and
six-story apartment blocks – Town Plan Scheme (TPS) 12705 – in the
Jerusalem Local Planning Commission. If TPS 12705 comes to pass, the
existing Palestinian houses in this key area would be demolished, about
500 Palestinians would be evicted, and 200 new settler units would be
built for a new settlement: Shimon HaTzadik.
Implanting new Jewish settlements in East Jerusalem and the West
Bank is illegal under many international laws, including Article 49 of
the Fourth Geneva Convention. The plight of the Gawi, al-Kurd and the
Hannoun families is just a small part of Israel’s ongoing campaign of
ethnic cleansing of the Palestinian people from East Jerusalem.
Legal background
The eviction orders, issued by Israeli courts, are a result of claims
made in 1967 by the Sephardic Community Committee and the Knesseth
Yisrael Association (who since sold their claim to the area to Nahalat
Shimon) – settler organizations whose aim is to take over the whole
area using falsified deeds for the land dating back to 1875. In 1972,
these two settler organizations applied to have the land registered in
their names with the Israel Lands Administration (ILA). Their claim to
ownership was noted in the Land Registry; however, it was never made
into an official registry of title. The first Palestinian property in
the area was taken over at this time.
The case continued in the courts for another 37 years. Amongst other
developments, the first lawyer of the Palestinian residents reached an
agreement with the settler organizations in 1982 (without the knowledge
or consent of the Palestinian families) in which he recognized the
settlers’ ownership in return for granting the families the legal
status of protected tenants. This affected 23 families and served as a
basis for future court and eviction orders (including the al-Kurd
family house take-over in December 2009), despite the immediate appeal
filed by the families’ new lawyer. Furthermore, a Palestinian
landowner, Suleiman Darwish Hijazi, has legally challenged the
settlers’ claims. In 1994 he presented documents certifying his
ownership of the land to the courts, including tax receipts from 1927.
In addition, the new lawyer of the Palestinian residents located a
document, proving the land in Sheikh Jarrah had never been under Jewish
ownership. The Israeli courts rejected these documents.
The first eviction orders were issued in 1999 based on the (still
disputed) agreement from 1982 and, as a result, two Palestinian
families (Hannoun and Gawi) were evicted in February 2002. After the
2006 Israeli Supreme Court finding that the settler committees’
ownership of the lands was uncertain, and the Lands Settlement officer
of the court requesting that the ILA remove their names from the Lands
Registrar, the Palestinian families returned back to their homes. The
courts, however, failed to recognize new evidence presented to them and
continued to issue eviction orders based on decisions from 1982 and
1999 respectively. Further evictions followed in November 2008 (Kamel
al-Kurd family) and August 2009 (Hannoun and Gawi families for the
second time). An uninhabited section of a house belonging to the
al-Kurd family was taken over by settlers on 1 December 2009.
International Solidarity Movement