Jaffa house demolition prevented, threat still pending

by Anarchists Against the Wall, March 11th

A massive demolition wave was about to begin today with the destruction of a building that is home to a family of five. The family was able to get a judge to issue a 14-day injunction early in the morning, after spending the night barricaded in the house with dozens of activists.

Roughly 300 demolition orders were issued recently against homes of Israeli-Palestinians in Ajami, the largest Palestinian neighborhood of Jaffa. The wave is part of a plan to Judaize and gentrify Ajami of its poor, largely Palestinian community.


Activists in the yard of the house

From 11pm last night activists started pouring into the Saba family’s home, intending to stop the eviction of the family and the subsequent demolition of the house. Initial legal work was also done, as word of the planned demolition was only heard the day before. At about midnight an injunction request was filed in the Tel Aviv district court. The injunction order issued by the judge was conditional upon payment of a 2,500 NIS bond the following morning.

Only one bureaucratic obstacle remained – the demolition order was supposed to come into force at 8am, but depositing the bond before that time was impossible due to court secretariat operating hours.


Activists barricaded on the roof

Activists continued to arrive throughout the night and the early hours of the morning. When the police arrived they were greeted by dozens of activists, barricaded on the roof, inside the house and in the yard.


A policeman at the scene

This, and the presence of two Knesset members from the Communist Party, was enough to hold back the cops and contractors for about an hour until the injunction order was ready.

Though the house is off limits for the next 14 days, it is not yet safe. Together with approximately 300 other houses, it is threatened by a plan to Judaize Ajami, and gentrify it of its poor and largely Palestinian community.

This new plan is only part of a long history of colonization and dispossession in Ajami. In 1947 almost 71,00 Palestinians lived in Jaffa. The ’48 War and the brutal occupation of Jaffa by the Zionist Irgun (Etzel) and Hagana turned most into refugees and left only 3,650 Palestinians in the city.

Almost all private property was expropriated and handed to the Guardian of Absentees Property (that’s how Israel chose to refer to the refugees). Later ownership was transferred to the Israeli Administration of Real Estate. Palestinians who remained, many of them from the villages in the area, were boxed off in the Ajami Ghetto, that was surrounded by a fence, and was under military rule until 1966.

In the 70s and 80s Shlomo Lahat (Chich), then mayor of Tel Aviv, openly declared a policy to Judaize Jaffa. This policy included the demolition of hundreds of houses, mostly in Ajami. The construction waste that was left, along with construction waste from the entire area was deposited onto a two-kilometers long stretch of beach in Ajami. The Israeli Supreme court stopped this activity in 1984, but it was too late to save the beach of Jaffa.


Bulldozers at work as part of the restoration of the Ajami beach

The current plan is to turn the garbage mountain into a beautiful park, and to restore Ajami to its prime days. Of course, Ajami’s location, its gravel hills overlooking the sea, and its high-end real estate prospects, assures that no one has any intention of leaving it to its original inhabitants. Even today you can see more and more huge mansions built by wealthy Jews, pushing up real estate prices and slowly pushing out the poor Palestinian population.

The “coincidental conjunction” between the city’s ambitious plans for cleaning out Ajami, mainly the restoration of the Ajami beach stretch and the wholesale issuing of demolition orders should leave no one in any doubt – a new Israeli campaign of ethnic cleansing is in the making.

Anarchist activist Jonathan Pollak given 3 month suspended sentence

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Jonathan Pollak, an activist with Anarchists Against the Wall was sentenced to 3 months in prison, that will be activated if he is convicted at a similar charge again. Pollak was sentenced today after he was convicted together with 10 other activist for blocking a road in Tel Aviv in protest of the construction of the wall. He asked the Tel Aviv Magistrate’s Court to sentence him to jail time, rather than community service or a suspended sentence, saying he has no intention to stop resisting the occupation. The ten other convicted activists were sentenced to 80 hours of community service.

In his sentencing statement Pollak said ” This trial, had it not taken place in a court of the occupation, in the democracy imposed on 3.5 million Palestinian subjects devoid of basic democratic liberties – was supposed to be a trial of the wall. The same wall defined as a illegal by the highest legal authority in the world; the same wall that serves as a political tool in the campaign of ethnic cleansing Israel is running in the occupied territories.”

“It was not us who were supposed to stand here in the dock, but those who plan and carry into action the Israeli apartheid,” Pollak continued. He also stated that while he is not surprised by his conviction, he does not recognize it as legitimate, explaining that is the reason he refused community service or cooperation with the probation authorities.

To end his statement Pollak asked that the court punish him with a prison sentence and not a suspended one. “In a state of things where any gathering in the territories is considered illegal because of a widespread anti-democratic policy of closed military zones, any suspended sentence given to me will quickly become a prison term” pollak said, then turning to the judge personally, saying “if your honor believes one should be sent to prison for such acts, please take the liberty and personally send me to prison here and now”.

The state prosecutor quickly responded by asking not to send Pollak to prison, but rather to pose a conditional sentence and a fine.

Jonathan Pollak’s full sentencing statement

From the first moment of this trial we took responsibility for our acts. We’ve never denied, even for an instant, that we sat on the road. Quite the opposite – we fully admitted this, and we explained why we did so. The defense was revolved around two central axes – exposing the police’s lies and their invention of fictional accusations, which the court has already addressed, and on the principals of civil resistance. In its decision, the court stated that we were attempting to drag this court into the political arena, which it should avoid like fire, lest it get burned. In fact, the state prosecution was the one doing the dragging. In every crime and in every trial, the question of motive is a central one. Our so called crime is clearly a political one, and so are its motives.

This trial, had it not taken place in a court of the occupation, in the democracy imposed on 3.5 million Palestinian subjects devoid of basic democratic liberties, would have been the trial of the Wall; that same wall that was defined as illegal by the highest legal authority in the world; that same wall that is used as a political tool in the campaign of ethnic cleansing being undertaken by Israel in the Occupied Territories; that same wall that in its previous route, that route of the relevant days, was thrown out even by Israeli courts! It was not us who should have been standing accused here, but rather the architects and enforcers of Israeli Apartheid.

To our assertion that there is a duty to violate the law at times, the court answered that in such times, one must accept the punishment as well. This response contains an obvious moral failure. The correct response would be that those who violate the law must expect punishment. Expect it, but under no circumstances accept its legitimacy.

I am not surprised that we were found guilty. But in spite of that, I cannot accept the legitimacy of the punishment. That is the reason I refused to cooperate with the parole agency, and I will refuse community service as well.

I believe that at this stage of the trial the defense tends to state that this is the defendant’s first conviction, that he is a normal human being, who is well within the bounds of civil society, that he works a steady job and so on and so forth. I will argue otherwise. I will state that while this is indeed my first conviction, it is unlikely to be my last. I still believe that what I did was necessary and morally correct, and that resistance to oppression is the duty of every human being, even at a personal price.

It is customary to ask for leniency – not to impose an active sentence, and to be satisfied with a conditional sentence. I will ask not to have a conditional sentence imposed on me, but an active one, since as things are, any demonstration taking place in the Occupied Territories is declared illegal assembly, according to the extensive and anti-democratic system of closed military zone warrants. In this state of affairs, any conditional sentence imposed upon me will quickly become an active one. If your honor believes one should be sent to prison for such acts, please take the liberty and personally send me to prison here and now.

Downtown Tel Aviv blockaded again

by the ISM media team, February 3rd


photos by Active Stills

In a replica of an action on December 28th, Israeli activists brought part of downtown Tel Aviv to a standstill this afternoon. This time they struck on Rothshild Street, where they speedily blockaded the road with razor wire from the Apartheid Wall. As last time, they hung a sign from the Wall that reads in Arabic, Hebrew and English: “Mortal Danger-Military Zone. Any person who passes or damages the fence endangers his life”. The activists managed to escape before the police arrived.

click here for video footage of today’s action

click here for Haaretz coverage

click here for YNet coverage

Anarchists Against the Wall block Central Tel Aviv

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Israeli activists have blocked central Tel Aviv with razor wire from the Apartheid Wall. The activists stretched the razor wire across Basel Street with a sign from the Wall that reads in Arabic, Hebrew and English: “Mortal Danger-Military Zone. Any person who passes or damages the fence endangers his life”.

The twenty activists from Anarchists Against the Wall, who attend the weekly Friday demonstrations against the Apartheid Wall in Bil’in, set up the blockade at around 2pm and started handing out flyers to passers by explaining the action.

The action was taken to protest the Apartheid Wall being built through the West Bank, as well as severe travel restrictions on Palestinians. The leaflets remind Israelis that they bear responsibility for the suffering of Palestinians as a result of their government’s apartheid
policies.

For details contact Yonaton Pollack: 0546327736
For photos contact Oren: 0523767272

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For YNet coverage click here
For Haaretz coverage click here