Palestinian forced to demolish home by himself Members of the - TopicsExpress



          

Palestinian forced to demolish home by himself Members of the Israeli security forces arrest a Palestinian cameraman from Palestinian TV following a protest against the expropriation of Palestinian land by Israel in the village of Kfar Qaddum, near Nablus in the occupied West Bank. – AFP Mohammed Mar’i Saudi Gazette RAMALLAH – A Palestinian resident was forces to demolish his home in occupied Jerusalem by himself on Saturday to avoid paying the expensive demolition fees. Palestinian sources said that the 57-year-old Monzer Mohammed Hijazi demolished his 55 square meters home in the Al-Sa’diyya neighborhood in Jerusalem’s Old City after he received a demolition notice from the municipality to avoid paying 100,000 Israeli shekel (roughly $28,000). The Jewish-dominated Jerusalem municipality said in its demolition warrant that the structure, home to eight residents, was “illegally built.” Some East Jerusalemites start since 2000 to carry out the demolitions themselves to avoid paying exorbitant fines for the homes build without licenses from Israeli authorities, fearful they could become mired in debt. The policy of house demolitions and settlement building in East Jerusalem is being used by the Israeli authorities and Jewish-dominated Jerusalem municipality to increase Jewish presence and manipulate the composition of the population in order to gain more control over the city prior to final status talks with the Palestinian Authority. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said recently that at least 93,100 Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem are under the threat of displacement due to the Israeli house demolition policy. OCHA said in a new report that the residents are living in structures built without permits from the Jerusalem municipality. It added that the municipality demolished 42 Palestinian structures in the disputed city. The UN body said several other structures were self-demolished. It added that only 13 percent of East Jerusalem is zoned for Palestinian construction, much of which is already built up, compared with 35 percent which has been expropriated and zoned for the use of Jewish settlers. Ahmed Al-Rowaidhi, the chief of Al-Quds Unit at the Palestinian Presidency, said that 20,000 homes in several parts of the city are under the threat of demolition. Al-Rowaidhi added that the Palestinians build the homes without permits “due to the laws and regulation imposed on Jerusalemites by the Israeli authorities and the lack of building plans in several Arab neighborhoods.” The Palestinian official said the municipality “uses the statute 212 of the Israeli Laws of Building and Planning against the citizens.” He added that the same statute was in the demolition of Al-Sharaf and al-Magharebah neighborhoods in 1968 and other demolitions in 1998 and 2005. Israel captured East Jerusalem in the June 1967 War, annexed it in 1980, and has since built settlements there that are home to some 300,000 Jewish settlers. Control over the city has been seen as the most sensitive and thorniest issue of Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Palestinians hope to make East Jerusalem the capital of their future state but the Israel says the city is its eternal capital.
Posted on: Sun, 23 Jun 2013 02:36:22 +0000

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