Israel plans to spend 3.5 million shekels ( $1 million) of unpaid UNESCO money on Jewish heritage sites in Hebron (Al-Khalil).
The Israeli Knesset is expected to vote on Wednesday to relocate the funds that would have been paid to UNESCO to the Ministry of Jerusalem and Heritage, with specific instruction to spend it on the development of Jewish heritage sites in Hebron, the Jerusalem Post revealed.
The Israeli cabinet is set to transfer money that was going to feed @UNESCO's penchant for erasing Jewish history, and giving it instead to #Hebron in order to preserve the 3500 years of Jewish history in the city. https://t.co/Yts2CeDypc @UriKarzen
— Yishai Fleisher ? (@YishaiFleisher) September 3, 2018
The paper added that:
“An explanatory text regarding the vote said it was a direct response to a 2017 UNESCO decision to inscribe Hebron’s Old Town and the Cave of the Patriarchs [the Ibrahimi Mosque] onto the list of endangered World Heritage sites under the State of Palestine.”
The resolution was put forward by Jordan and was passed by 12 votes in favor, despite the US attempts to pressure a number of UN officials into rejecting the motion.
UNESCO says Hebron is in Palestine. And that's what Israel can't abide. https://t.co/IaXDygZfkL https://t.co/hKFkQwgEuf pic.twitter.com/be1cxjvZOD
— Ben White (@benabyad) July 10, 2017
UNESCO, or the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, formally recognized Palestine as a member state in 2011, becoming the first UN body to do so. In response, the US and Israel withdrew from UNESCO and stopped paying the annual sum to its projects, losing their voting rights as a result.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said:
“UNESCO has become a theatre of the absurd. Instead of preserving history, it distorts it.”
“This is a brave and moral decision, because Unesco has become a theatre of absurd. Instead of preserving history, it distorts it.” dijo @netanyahu … esteeee ok ?https://t.co/fNyLigvnOP
— Vale Mendiola (@ValeMendiola) October 12, 2017
UNESCO has long been critical of Israel and its policies. In 2017, UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee condemned Israeli policy in occupied East Jerusalem, calling Israel an “occupying power”.
The committee added that the UN
“Regrets the failure of the Israeli occupying authorities to cease the persistent excavations, tunneling, works, projects and other illegal practices in East Jerusalem, particularly in and around the Old City of Jerusalem, which are illegal under international law.”
Dec23:UNSC Res.2334.all 1967 #Palestine lands r occupied
This week:#UNESCO #Jerusalem & #Hebron occupied,
Israel claims as its name,r fake pic.twitter.com/CfmzMgxQgu— Baz4peace (@Baz4peace) July 7, 2017
In 2016, UNESCO voted on a resolution which denied any Jewish connection to Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque and Al-Buraq (Western) Wall. The proposal was put forward by a collection of MENA states and passed by a 24-member state majority. The resolution recognized the sanctity of the wider city of Jerusalem to the three Abrahamic faiths – Judaism, Christianity, and Islam – but stressed that Al-Aqsa Mosque and its courtyards are only sacred to Muslims.
"We commend the UNESCO vote that denied historic claims between Jews and the al-Aqsa Mosque and its Western Wall." https://t.co/FeO15q5vti
— Al Jazeera News (@AJENews) October 16, 2016
Hebron, situated in the south of the occupied West Bank, and its Ibrahimi Mosque are repeatedly targeted by Israel. In August, Israeli forces stormed the city and injured dozens of Palestinians, shooting sound bombs and tear gas canisters at Palestinians and stopping and searching residents and vehicles.
Israel also closed the Ibrahimi Mosque to Muslims in August in preparation for a Jewish holiday, banning the call to prayer. The Palestinian Authority (PA) called on Arabic and Islamic states to help, labeling the move
“A new Israeli crime in the record of the Israeli crimes being committed against the Palestinians, their land, and their holy sites.”
Israel unlawfully banned the Call to Prayer 298 times at Ibrahimi Mosque during the first 6 months of 2018 #BDS https://t.co/rsf3ngH2TV
— Sarah Wilkinson (@swilkinsonbc) July 11, 2018
The Israeli government has also sought to expand its illegal settlement projects in the area surrounding Hebron. Last month, the Likud government approved plans to expand the industrial park of Kiryat Arba, an illegal Jewish-only settlement to the east of the city.
The war on UNESCO: Al-Aqsa Mosque is Palestinian and East Jerusalem is illegally occupied By: Ramzy Baroud
— EuroPal Forum (@EuroPalForum) October 27, 2016
The plans will see the park tripled in size, at a cost of 10 million shekels ($2.7 million). Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem estimates that some 800 Israeli settlers live in H2, the illegal inner-city settlement in Hebron city, along with many more in the city’s suburbs and South Hebron Hills.
(MEMO, PC, Social Media)