Haaretz: MKs okay new West Bank homes, despite vow to freeze settlements

By Haaretz Service and News Agencies

To view original article, published by Haaretz on 24th July, click here

A key panel of lawmakers on Thursday approved 20 new housing units at Maskiot in the West Bank, Israel Radio reported, despite a 2007 pledge to the United States to halt construction at the site.

Jerusalem agreed to hold off on plans to build 180 new homes in the settlement, as part of a general freeze on Israeli construction in the West Bank.

But the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee has now given approval for the construction of the housing units and Defense Minister Ehud Barak is slated to grant authorization soon.

About two dozen residents of the former Gaza Strip settlement of Shirat Hayam moved into Maskiot last year.

Maskiot was legally established in 1982, housed an army unit and a school and has had civilians living there for several years. Israel planned in 2006 to build within its confines homes for Gush Katif evacuees.

There was no immediate government response to the report, which is certain to raise the ire of Palestinian and United States leaders, who have been pushing Israel to freeze construction in the settlements as part of the road map peace plan.

Israel has promised not to establish new settlements and refrain from construction in its existing communities in the West Bank.

Still, the government has approved construction in areas of East Jerusalem past the Green Line. Although these areas are heavily surrounded by an Arab population, Israel does not consider them settlements.

The Jerusalem District Planning and Construction Committee earlier this month approved the construction of 1,800 new housing in Har Homa and Pisgat Ze’ev, two neighborhoods over the Green Line division.

The plan, which still requires approval from Jerusalem’s local committee, includes the construction of 920 new housing units in Har Homa and 880 units in Pisgat Ze’ev.

Such expansion goes against the official stance of the U.S. government, which opposes construction in East Jerusalem.

Give ‘Free Gaza Movement’ thumbs up!

By Debbie Menon

Edward Said reminded the world shortly before his death in 2003 that it is easier for the West to demonise the Palestinian – through ‘the vicious media and government campaign against Arab society, culture, history and mentality’ – than actually attempt to humanize what they don’t fully understand. The Gaza imprisonment in the summer of 2005, paraded as an Israeli generous withdrawal, produced the Hamas and Islamic Jihad homemade missile attack and capture of an Israeli Occupation soldier. Even before the capture of Gilad Shalit, the Israeli army bombarded indiscriminately the Gaza Strip.

Putting a human face to the Palestinian people and explicitly saying Israeli policies towards Palestinians are immoral should be acceptable in Western democratic mainstream news media. “It is Not!” Why is it controversial to advocate Palestinian human rights and an independent homeland? After all, the Jews already have Israel. It is time for radical thinking of the conflict.

“Palestinians count on us internationals to help,” explained successful businesswoman Greta Berlin, whose leg is scarred by a wound from an Israeli rubber-coated steel bullet. “They ask us why the U.S. is paying the Israelis to bomb them. I told them I would come back and tell every American I could what is truly happening. I’m mad and sad, and I don’t know what else to do.”

Now, she and a small group of human rights watchers have put to sea in small boats! They started a couple of years ago to put together a “flotilla” of boats, crewed by well-known names, who would land on the shores of Gaza, demonstrating the sovereignty of Gaza in defiance of the Israeli blockade. This is the culmination of their efforts.

More than 40 of them from 16 countries, amongst them Prof. Norman Finkelstein and Prof. Jeff Halper of the Israeli Committee against House Demolitions, Anne Montgomery, a retired 81-year-old nun, Hedy Epstein, herself a Holocaust survivor and several others who wait until the launch to have their names announced, are leaving in August to break Israel’s siege of Gaza. They will sail in two boats to challenge Israel’s authority over an occupied people. Many have been working on this project for two years, and have risen close to $225,000 to buy the boats and set sail. Here is their ad that will be shown in the Middle East in the next few weeks. It’s on www.freegaza.org and YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ex0v5BDVFHk

They have set up a list serve used exclusively to keep friends and members of the press informed of the voyage of the two boats, the S.S. FREE GAZA and the S.S. LIBERTY (in honor of the 34 sailors murdered by Israel in 1967 while on board the USS Liberty) during their journey. If you are interested in following their progress, go to lists.riseup.net/www/subscribe/gazafriends. They will be posting press releases, updates and announcements there.

You can also watch the voyage in real time at www.freegaza.org after August 5 as they set sail from Cyprus. Give the ‘Free Gaza Movement’ thumbs up! And, stay tuned!

(Debbie Menon: debbie.menon@yahoo.com is an independent writer based in Dubai.)

Haaretz: Court upholds ruling to evict Palestinian family from East Jerusalem home

By Akiva Eldar

To view original article, published in Haaretz, click here

The High Court of Justice last week upheld a ruling for the eviction of a Palestinian family from the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of East Jerusalem, whose house is owned by religious Jews. The eviction spurred protest by senior Palestinian Authority officials, and diplomats from several consulates have already visited the house.

The Khurd family has lived in the contested building since 1956, when the area was under Jordanian control. After the area came under Israel’s control in 1967, the Committee of the Sephardi Jewry and the Committee of the Knesset of Israel – two religious bodies – presented the Israeli authorities with various documents showing that they had purchased the area during the Ottoman rule.

The Palestinian families residing there were allowed to stay on as protected tenants, until they stopped paying rent. This prompted the owners to file for their eviction at the Jerusalem District Court, which ruled in favor of the plaintiffs from the Nachlat Shimon non-profit organization.

The family appealed to the High Court of Justice, but the justices upheld the district court’s ruling. Following the ruling, Rafik Husseini, an aide to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, last week contacted a number of consulates saying that the eviction creates a legal precedent, which will allow the eviction of 25 other Palestinian families who are in the same legal situation.

Since the 1990s, Nachlat Shimon, which represents land owners as they are listed in the records of Israeli authorities, has been making its presence felt in buildings surrounding the tomb of Simeon the Just (or Shimon HaTzaddik) a High Priest during the time of the Second Temple. If the family is evicted, Nachlat Shimon will take over the property.

In his letter, Rafik Husseini said hundreds of Palestinian families whose legal heirs now reside in East Jerusalem own between them no less than 60 percent of the area of the western part of the capital. He went on to say that Israeli courts never ruled that any of them should receive any of their houses. Husseini called the move a drive aimed at changing the demographic and geographic conditions in the city’s eastern part by replacing Palestinians with “Israeli settlers.”

Following Husseini’s letter, diplomats from the U.S. consulate in Jerusalem visited the house, along with several other diplomats. Additionally activists from organizations such as Rabbis for Human Rights have set up protest vigils near the house, with the intention of physically preventing the eviction.

J-Post: Shin Bet probes ‘settler rocket fire’ near Nablus

By Yaakov Katz and Tovah Lazaroff

To view original article, published by the Jerusalem Post on 22nd July, click here

The Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) was looking into Palestinian claims on Monday that settlers from Har Bracha and Yitzhar in the West Bank fired two rockets into fields near Nablus.

This burnt cylinder, which Palestinians claim is a homemade rocket, was found in a field near Nablus on Sunday.

A picture of the “rocket” provided by a left-wing activist and obtained by The Jerusalem Post shows a burning metallic cylinder lying in a field near Nablus.

The Shin Bet said it could not confirm what the cylinder was and raised the possibility that settlers had fired a homemade rocket or that Palestinians had discovered an old military shell and set it on fire.

One of the two projectiles landed in a field near the villages of Awarta and Odala, Hani Dalrashi of Awarta told the Post. He said it was the fourth time that settlers had fired rockets at Palestinian villages south of Nablus.

Last week, the police arrested a settler from Yitzhar for allegedly participating in a failed rocket attack against the Palestinian village of Burin in June. Settlers from Yitzhar and Har Bracha rejected the claim that members of their community were firing homemade rockets at the Palestinians.

But Dalrashi said he had been standing at an auto mechanic’s garage in the village when someone came to say that a rocket had fallen just outside the village. He went to explore and found a 45-centimeter cylinder that was smoking on one end. Although he and others in the village called the army, he said, they did not arrive until 4:30 p.m.

Dalrashi’s story was confirmed by Israeli volunteer Nur Bar-On of Machsom Watch, which monitors IDF activity at the checkpoints. She said she had arrived at the Hawara checkpoint at about 1:20 p.m. Palestinian taxi drivers told her about the rockets, and she asked one of them to take her to the one outside Awarta.

Bar-On found the metal cylinder lying in a field, with smoke coming out of it.

“It looked dangerous,” she said.

Bar-On discounted the IDF claim that it was an old military shell, saying there was no Hebrew writing on it and typically such shells have some kind of a mark that identifies it as belonging to the IDF.

She believed it was a homemade device. A similar rocket also fell Monday in Burin, she added.

To view ISM report on the incident click here

The National: West Bank construction challenged

By Brendan Howley

To view original article, published by The National on 21st July, click here

In an inventive legal action, two lawyers for the West Bank Palestinian village of Bi’ilin have filed a civil statement of claim against a pair of Jewish-owned Canadian construction companies building condominiums in the village for Israeli settlers.

Damages of $2 million Canadian (Dh7.3m) are sought as compensation, the suit said, for “crimes against humanity” alleged to have been committed by the occupying Israeli forces. The incoming settlers represent a transfer of the occupier’s civilian population to occupied territory, illegal under international war crimes law.

The statement of claim argues that the Canadian companies are “aiding and abetting” building of illegal housing on Palestinian land occupied by Israel since 1967, in contravention of Canadian war crimes legislation and the Geneva Convention.

Under Canadian war crimes legislation, itself governed by the Geneva Convention, illegal occupation of a conquered territory is a crime against humanity.

“Very simply,” said Mark Arnold, the Canadian co-counsel who has acted against the Iranian government in a torture case, “the fourth Geneva Convention forbids the settlements”.

For nearly three years, the village, west of Ramallah and north of Jerusalem, has been the focus of weekly protests against the 680-km dividing wall – the so-called “separation wall” – that runs through village territory. Bi’ilin stands near the Green Line, the only internationally recognised boundary on the West Bank. It is legally an occupied territory.

The Bi’ilin protests have been marred by demonstrators throwing rocks and retaliation by Israel Defence Forces.

Last month, the visiting vice president of the European parliament, a Northern Irish Nobel Peace Prize laureate and a senior Italian judge were all injured in a fracas at the Bi’ilin wall.

This is not the first time Bi’ilin has appeared in legal documents.

Bi’ilin won a limited victory in the Israeli supreme court in September, when the court ordered the IDF to move the wall 1.7km back towards the Green Line.

But the novel legal action before the superior court in Montreal leads back not to the Green Line but to the highly successful Canadian housing construction firm of Green Park, headquartered in Montreal – a curious turn of events in the war for public opinion between the Palestinians and the Israelis.

Green Park, owned by Shaya Boymelgreen, a New York-based real estate magnate, is a multinational building and development firm. Mr Boymelgreen’s business has no connection to Canada’s residential development company Greenpark International or its affiliates.

Mr Boymelgreen himself, long regarded as a virtuoso developer, has undertaken some of the most successful – and controversial – New York City development projects of the past decade, including several spectacular Manhattan and Brooklyn successes with his former partner, Lev Leviev. The two went their separate ways in 2007, and Mr Leviev is not named in the Montreal statement of claim.

It is no coincidence the Palestinian legal manoeuvre targets Mr Boymelgreen via existing Canadian war crimes legislation.

The legislation that the Palestinians’ lawyers argue has jurisdiction over the Green Park Bi’ilin settlements project was first enacted in 1987 to enable prosecution of Nazi-era war crimes suspects then alive who were residents of Canada.

The Canadian war crimes legislation, which failed to produce the conviction of a single Nazi war crimes suspect, largely because of the presiding judges’ reluctance to admit evidence of elderly Second World War victims, has since allowed for the trial of a senior Rwandan official alleged to have sparked the 1995 genocide.

In 2000, Canada was the first country to bring The Hague’s International Criminal Court occupation statute into its own war crimes laws; the so-called Rome Statute forbids an occupying power from transferring its civilian population into territory the occupier controls as the spoils of war. Canadian war crimes legislation has “universal jurisdiction”: the law applies to anyone anywhere. Canada is thus an ideal jurisdiction to argue that the villagers of Bi’ilin have recourse in a non-Israeli court of law to argue their case.

The Bi’ilin lawsuit, Mr Arnold said, has been more than a year in preparation. Approached by a Canadian academic to examine the villagers’ situation, Mr Arnold, a civil litigator specialising in condominium law and human rights cases, partnered with Michael Sfard, an Israeli lawyer, and began their strategy.

Mr Arnold, who visited Bi’ilin with his wife in May, is Jewish. “We sat in the shadow of the separation wall,” Mr Arnold said, “guarded by a dozen Israeli soldiers, listening to the villagers talk about their lives. I went to meet the village council and to make sure the legal costs of the case weren’t coming out of the mouths of the children.”

The Bi’ilin wall cuts off the village from its surrounding farmland; the Sept 2007 ruling ordering the wall’s relocation has not yet been enforced.

Mr Arnold makes no distinction with respect to human rights violations. “I’m concerned about the Israeli homeowners living in state-subsidised housing on occupied land. What’s going to become of them?”

Should the Bi’ilin villagers win, Mr Arnold and his co-counsel plan to argue before an Israeli court that the damages award – which is only valid in Quebec – should be ordered paid in Israel and a Quebec court-ordered injunction forbid further construction be imposed at Bi’ilin.

“It’s clear these are two Canadian companies, domiciled in Canada,” Mr Arnold said. “I don’t know what [Green Park’s] creative defence is.”

Green Park has filed a motion with the Montreal court to defend against the suit.