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Israel Tightening Grip on Jerusalem 06/10 06:14
JERUSALEM (AP) -- Fakhri Abu Diab fought for decades to save his home. But
when Israeli authorities arrived with bulldozers two years ago, he was
powerless to stop them.
He and his wife now live among shards of memory: a bicycle where his bedroom
stood; the garden where he planted tomatoes as a boy; a portrait of his late
mother painted on a wall, based on a photograph lost in the demolition. Their
mobile home, set up amid the rubble, is also marked for removal.
They are "trying to erase my memories, my childhood, my history," he said,
wiping away tears.
For decades, Israel has worked to expand the Jewish presence in annexed east
Jerusalem -- the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and home to major
Jewish, Christian and Muslim sites. Settlers have exploited discriminatory
policies and archaeological claims to evict Palestinians far from the region's
war zones.
Activists say those efforts have gone into overdrive in recent years, as
Israel is no longer constrained by U.S. pressure and attention has shifted to
Gaza, Lebanon and Iran.
Over 260 homes and other structures were demolished in 2025, a 70% increase
from three years earlier, with some neighborhoods seeing the most evictions in
decades, according to Ir Amim, an Israeli anti-settlement group that closely
tracks such policies. There have been at least 116 demolitions so far this
year, it said.
It's "an intensity and scope that we have never seen," said Aviv Tatarsky, a
researcher at Ir Amim. "Israel can decide, yes, this neighborhood, we want to
erase it ... No one is going to stop us."
Israeli government supports settlement growth
Israel captured east Jerusalem, along with the West Bank and Gaza, in the
1967 Mideast war. The Palestinians want all three territories for their future
state, and the U.N. and much of the international community consider them to be
illegally occupied.
Israel considers all of Jerusalem to be its unified capital and says
residents are treated equally by law.
Palestinians in annexed east Jerusalem are eligible for Israeli citizenship,
but unlike Jews, they must apply for it -- a long, uncertain process. Most
choose not to because it would recognize Israel's claims to the city. That
leaves them with few ways to challenge housing policy, largely set by Israel's
Parliament.
Rights activists say that in addition to supporting the development of major
Jewish settlements -- which many Israelis view as ordinary neighborhoods --
authorities have severely limited the growth of Palestinian neighborhoods,
making it virtually impossible to obtain housing permits.
Last year, nearly 9,000 permits were approved for Jerusalem's Jewish
residents and fewer than 700 for Palestinians, according to Bimkom, an Israeli
rights group. Palestinians make up some 40% of Jerusalem's population and are
concentrated in the east.
Israeli officials say the discrepancy exists because Palestinians rarely
apply for permits. Many Palestinians say it's futile.
When Palestinians build without permits, they face the threat of demolition.
Settler groups meanwhile exploit an array of laws to purchase or take over
Palestinian properties.
Previous U.S. administrations have pressed Israel to slow or suspend
settlement projects, viewing them as an obstacle to resolving the conflict.
U.S. President Donald Trump broke with that tradition in his first term,
recognizing Jerusalem as Israel's capital.
The U.S. State Department said in a statement that it's up to Israeli
authorities to set policy in Jerusalem, and that it expects them to respect due
process and the rule of law.
The neighborhood is near major religious sites
Abu Diab's neighborhood, al-Bustan, extends through a valley just outside
the Old City, with the dome of the Al-Aqsa Mosque visible above the towering
walls. Named for the orchards that once grew there, the neighborhood is now a
crowded jumble of low concrete blocks and demolition sites.
It's part of the larger district of Silwan, home to some 20,000 Palestinians
and coveted by settlers because it is near major religious and archaeological
sites. The mosque is the third holiest in Islam, and the hilltop where it
stands is the holiest site for Jews, who refer to it as the Temple Mount
because it was where the two Jewish temples stood in antiquity.
The Jerusalem municipality said the homes in al-Bustan are being demolished
because they were built without permits in areas not zoned for housing. A park
and public parking lot will be established there for the benefit of all
residents, it said in a statement.
The municipality said it put forward plans for alternative housing in the
neighborhood but that residents did not show "serious intentions" to reach an
agreement.
Abu Diab has been battling demolition orders in court since 2004. Part of
his home was built before 1967, but his growing family expanded it without
permits because it was impossible to get them, he said.
In February 2024, police gave him and his wife minutes to pack before
demolishing their home. Since then, they have lived in the mobile home, their
suitcases packed.
They are among some 1,500 Palestinians in al-Bustan whose homes could be
demolished at any time.
Settlers move in as Palestinians are evicted
A short distance away, in the congested Batan al-Hawah neighborhood,
settlers are moving in as Palestinians are evicted.
Zuhair al-Rajabi and dozens of his extended family were ordered out in
January, when Israel's Supreme Court ruled against them after more than a
decade of legal action.
Thumbing through papers in his living room, he pulled out a document from
1966 saying the property is his. He says he has to leave by July but has
nowhere to go, as rents are high in Jerusalem. "The problem, in short, is that
they don't want us here," he said.
March marked the highest rate of state-led evictions in the neighborhood in
decades, with 15 families forced out and hundreds more people at risk,
according to B'Tselem, an Israeli rights group.
Israeli laws allow settlers to reclaim properties that were owned by other
Jews before the 1948 war surrounding Israel's creation. Palestinians who fled
or were driven from their homes in what is now Israel during that conflict are
barred from returning. Authorities have also transferred state-held land to
settler groups.
The Batan al-Hawah evictions show "the cooperation between settler
organizations and state institutions, based on discriminatory laws, toward a
shared goal -- the Judaization of east Jerusalem and the replacement of
Palestinian residents with Israeli settlers," said Yair Dvir, a spokesperson
for B'Tselem.
The Israeli judiciary, in a statement, said courts rule on the merits of
each case based on the circumstances, applicable law and established precedent,
and denied colluding with private organizations.
Daniel Luria, the executive director of Ateret Cohanim, one of the main
settler organizations in east Jerusalem, said it was working to correct a
"monumental historical injustice" by helping Jews to return to what had been a
Yemenite and Sephardic Jewish neighborhood up until the early 20th century,
when he says they were expelled by Arabs and then again by the British.
Since 2004, around 50 Jewish families have moved into the neighborhood and
more are eager to join them, he said. "There's never going to be a Palestinian
state," he added.
An Israeli flag waves above the home where Khalil Basbous was evicted in
January. The 68-year-old moved into a relative's house around the corner but
walks past his former home every day.
"It's mine," he said, wiping tears from his face and softly touching an
olive tree he had planted by the door. "I have no doubt that I will return."
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