A Palestinian family in occupied East Jerusalem was forced to tear down their own home on Saturday to avoid paying exorbitant demolition fees to the Israeli Jerusalem Municipality, following a demolition order on their home.
Official Palestinian Authority (PA)-owned Wafa news agency reported that the Abu Rajab family tore down their home in the al-Bustan area of Silwan, a neighborhood in East Jerusalem, after they were given and demolition notice.
The family was given two choices: destroy their home themselves, or wait for the municipality to destroy it and then pay the cost of the demolition.
Israeli authorities forces the Palestinian citizen "Amin Al-Abbasi" TO DEMOLISH HIS SHOP BY HIMSELF, in Silwan town, #Jerusalem , last night.#Palestine pic.twitter.com/6oEK7MU1Zd
— Palestine Social (@PalestineSocial) November 14, 2017
According to Wafa, the municipality claimed the home was built without a difficult to obtain Israeli-issued building permit.
A spokesman of a Silwan-based committee formed to fight demolitions, Fakhri Abu Diab, previously told Ma’an that all 100 residential structures in the al-Bustan area are slated for demolition, and that the 1,570 residents of the area have exhausted all legal options.
The residents of al-Bustan have been embroiled in a decades-long battle that began in the 1970s after the Israeli government embarked on a plan to build a national park in the area, with the city’s master plan defining the area as an open space where construction was prohibited, according to Israeli rights group B’Tselem.
#Palestine – IOF demolished the house of Abu Snaineh family in Silwan this morning for the 2nd time after rebuilding it. #Jerusalem pic.twitter.com/rFu8flWtOa
— DOAM (@doamuslims) August 22, 2017
Due to the designation, residents have long faced great difficulties contending with demolition orders issued against the homes that were built there without permits – mostly in the 1980s – due to the increasing population in Silwan.
The municipality began issuing demolition orders and indictments to homes in al-Bustan in 2005 as part of the Israeli authorities’ plan to establish the Jewish site “King David’s Garden” in Silwan and around the “Holy Basin,” which includes many Christian and Muslim holy sites.
Silwan is one of many Palestinian neighborhoods in East Jerusalem that has seen an influx of Israeli settlers at the cost of home demolitions and the eviction of Palestinian families.
— Bees a.k.a. BMONK (@reggyreg19cLgOd) December 21, 2017
According to UN documentation, as of December 18, 139 Palestinian-owned structures were demolished by Israel in East Jerusalem since the beginning of the year, displacing at least 228 Palestinians. A total of 190 Palestinian buildings were demolished in East Jerusalem in 2016.
(Ma’an, PC, Social Media)