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MIDEAST: The 'Unknown' Fight the Illegal By Jerrold Kessel and Pierre Klochendler OCCUPIED EAST JERUSALEM, Nov 8, 2009 (IPS) - "Make sure your father gets this," the municipal inspector tells a ten-year-old
boy at the gate of the concrete house in an alleyway in the Al-Bustan quarter of
Silwan, a Palestinian neighbourhood right under the shadow of the walled Old
City.
"This" is a court-approved demolition notice, "No. 59". It's for a house under
imminent threat of being torn down by the Israeli authorities because it does
not have the requisite building permit.
The demolition notice is headed: "To Unknown Addressee".
"Now they refer to me as 'Unknown'. But they know my name very well - they
address payment orders for all municipal and other taxes to me by name,"
says Moussa Oudeh.
Moussa, father of five, is one of 78 householders in Al-Bustan whose homes
are slated for demolition. Since the election of a new Israeli mayor exactly a
year ago, ten other houses in Al-Bustan have been bulldozed.
A handful of armed Israeli police and border police bar access to the narrow
alleyway.
A small crowd of residents gathers.
An argument breaks out in Hebrew between Sergeant Fares and Moussa, who
is flanked by Fakhri Abu Diab, the elected coordinator of the Silwan
Committee Against House Demolitions.
"This is the State of Israel, this is the Land of Israel," says the sergeant. "What
are you talking about," counters Moussa. "My father, my grandfather, my
grandfather's grandfather were all born here. We're from Silwan, you're the
occupiers."
"It may be your land, but it's our land too," answers Sergeant Fares.
A balding officer in sunglasses throws his arm around his sergeant's shoulder
and escorts him a few metres off. "Cool it," he whispers, "don't get drawn into
a political argument, please."
"What I don't understand," chimes in Fakhri, "is why the provocation. Why
come here with your helmets and battledress and rifles and jeeps - to
intimidate us? To push us to violence so that you think you can justify what
you're doing? If you're going to deliver demolition warrants, why not simply
send them in the post, like you do with our taxes?"
"How many demolition notices are you serving today, all 78?" we ask the two
baseball-capped city officials. "None of your business," replies the one in the
red cap, "You're in our way, clear off!"
"Their policy is to do it in dribs and drabs," explains Mohammad Nakhal, a
community coordinator in Palestinian neighbourhoods of East Jerusalem. "If
they did it all at once, the whole world would come down hard on them."
Mohammad has been caught up accidentally: he'd come to Silwan to talk to
Fakhri about future tactics for strengthening the peaceful community
resistance to active Israeli takeover policies in East Jerusalem.
If for Palestinians the timing of any demolition procedures is always ill-timed,
this time it may be ill-timed for Israel as well.
It's the eve of another meeting between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu and U.S. President Barack Obama; the Israeli leader reportedly
hopes the U.S. will side with Israel and fault the Palestinians for failing to
resume peace talks.
On the eve of Monday's planned Washington meeting, Palestinians were
encouraged by reports that the Obama Administration intends to harden its
stance on Israeli policies in occupied East Jerusalem.
The U.S. is apparently trying to appease the beleaguered Palestinian Authority
President Mahmoud Abbas who last week declared that he will step down
soon because of the impasse in peacemaking.
"We're growing disappointed. Obama has yet to translate his verbal promises
into deeds," says Mazen Abu Khulbein, another Silwan activist. "Still, we
haven't given up hope on him yet. His position on East Jerusalem will really
test his intentions."
The two police Land Rovers and two Toyota vans, all with iron grills
protecting their windscreens against stone-throwing, speed off to their next
destination, out of Wadi a-Nar and up the hill. Just 200 metres away, the
silver-blackened dome of the Al-Aqsa mosque inside the Haram Al-Sharif,
Noble Sanctuary compound (a site also holy to Jews as their Temple Mount),
looms over the imposing 16th century Old City walls.
The vans park near a new seven-storey block of flats. A blue-and-white
Israeli banner, with a large Star of David, has been unfurled from the roof
down to the alley beneath.
It's one of several buildings in Silwan where nationalist religious Israelis have
settled in recent years in a bid to boost the Jewish presence in the Arab
neighbouhood.
For some time, it's been an open secret that the settlers also don't have the
requisite permit for their building.
According to Israeli press reports, after the recent demolition nearby of a
small Palestinian home, human rights groups took the matter to the Israeli
courts. A city inspector called to the dock was asked by the magistrate, "How
come you didn't serve a demolition notification on the seven-storey building
as well?"
"I simply didn't notice it," replied the inspector.
The court has yet to take action on the petition against the settlers for their
infraction.
Down the road, outside the Al-Maleek pizza parlour, some of the policemen
have been on standby in case of trouble. Suddenly, the calm is threatened.
From a couple of alleys back, a small shower of stones comes over the roofs.
The policemen move quickly into battle position.
Sergeant Fares holds up his hand, staying any response.
Fakhri steps in as well, calming the clump of Palestinian onlookers. "We don't
want any additional trouble. Our main purpose is to get these orders
rescinded, and violence won't serve us at all," he says, addressing both the
policemen and the crowd.
"Mr Unknown" Moussa is still seething. As the vans prepare to drive off, he
flings his demolition notice into the face of the blue-capped city inspector.
It's flung contemptuously back.
Fakhri sums up the low-keyed, but potentially explosive, incident: "We're still
waiting to see light at the end of the tunnel. We have to keep clinging to our
hopes. Unfortunately, for the moment, if there's any light at all coming into
the tunnel, I fear it's no peace train, only the usual oncoming train that'll just
run us down blindly once again."
(This is the latest in an ongoing series on the changing face of East Jerusalem
after 42 years of Israeli occupation.) (END)
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