Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Outcry over Silwan demolition plan
Outcry over Silwan demolition plan
Aug 15, 2025 8:05 AM

  The Palestinian village of Silwan clings to a steep hillside facing the southern walls of Jerusalem's Old City.

  In the valley below, Al Bustan neighborhood stretches out in the shadow of Haram al-Sharif, also known as the Temple Mount. It is a setting rich in meaning for Muslims, Jews and Christians.

  But the Israeli authorities in Jerusalem have plans for the network of narrow alleyways and walled compounds that make up Al Bustan.

  They say the area has been ear-marked for parks and open spaces – and most of the homes here were built without permits.

  Which is bad news for Khaled Mohammad Rouwady, his children and grandchildren who live crammed together in a few small rooms.

  Their house is among 88 buildings which have received demolition orders from the Israeli-controlled Jerusalem municipality.

  The family has to pay heavy fines every month for living in what authorities describe as an "illegal structure".

  "They give building permits to the Jews," Rouwady complains.

  "They give them everything they need. But the Arabs living here in Jerusalem – they are finished, destroyed. They pay municipal taxes, they pay fines, but they have no rights."

  If the municipality proceeds with its demolition plans, 1,500 people will become homeless. At one stage, local officials proposed moving the whole community to land in the Beit Hanina area on the outskirts of Jerusalem, far away from the holy sites.

  The people of Al Bustan said no. Instead, they submitted an alternate zoning plan for their neighborhood, which was rejected by the district planning commission of the interior ministry.

  'Holy basin' project

  Another person who risks losing his home is the local imam, Sheikh Mousa Mahmoud Odeh.

  He believes there is a systematic plan to remove Palestinians from areas close to the Old City and redevelop the area for Jewish residents and the tourism industry. And he accuses the municipality of working hand-in-hand with right-wing Jewish settler groups.

  "I see a black future," said Sheikh Mousa. "The Jews are trying to displace all the Palestinians – from Silwan and from Jerusalem itself – so they can build a so-called 'holy basin'.

  "They consider all places overlooking Al-Aqsa mosque to be part of that holy basin. I think that we have lost Jerusalem."

  As the Palestinians are being squeezed out, the settlers are creeping in.

  There are now about 70 Jewish families living in the Silwan area. They either buy homes from Palestinians or simply grab them under Israel's Absentee Property Law, claiming that they have been abandoned.

  The Jerusalem municipality denies that it is involved.

  "We don't have a plan as far as how many Jews or Arabs will live in East Jerusalem," says Yakir Segev, a member of the city council recently appointed by Mayor Nir Barkat to oversee the Arab eastern part of the city.

  "When the municipality defines a certain area as a residential area, it doesn't say whether it's going to be Arab houses or houses for Jews. This is up to the owner of the land to decide."

  The threat of this mass demolition has provoked a huge outcry.

  The Fourth Geneva Convention forbids an occupying power from destroying the property of people living in the territory it controls.

  However, the Palestinians are under no illusions about Israel's attitude to international law – and the people of Al Bustan remain vigilant.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Israeli Forces during the demolition of a house in the West Bank.

  Source: Aljazeera.net

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Syrians routinely tortured in detention
  People detained by the Syrian authorities are being systematically and routinely tortured, an Amnesty International report alleges.   The rights group says officials are using techniques including suspending and then beating detainees with fists and rifle butts.   Many of those from whom Amnesty gathered testimony said children were among the torture...
Syria's greater revolution
  Veteran activists of the current Syrian uprising share their tales of struggle and revolution.   The Syrian revolution began gradually; a protest in Damascus, the detention of teenage anti-regime graffitists in Dar’aa, and the subsequent mass rally for their release that led to a strong military reaction happened over just a...
Syrian surgeon: Why I'm risking my life to treat protesters
  More than 8,000 people have been killed in Syria since the uprising began a year ago, and many more injured. Fearing ill-treatment at official hospitals, demonstrators have sought help at underground clinics. One Damascus surgeon tells his story.   I was at home, looking out of the window, watching a demonstration,...
Revenge of the settlers
  Palestinians are under increasing attacks from Israeli settlers, especially in the last few years, reports have found.   Fadi Quran is little different from any other Palestinian living in the West Bank, where violence from Israeli settlers is part of daily life. Hailing from the town of Al-Bireh, less than one...
Palestinians forge new strategies of resistance
  A one-state solution in Palestine/Israel is a subject being increasingly discussed and debated. One way in which the conversation has emerged is through an analysis of the current situation as a de facto one state, a regime which privileges Jews above Palestinians (the latter being granted or denied different rights...
Sharp increase in Palestinian deaths in 2011
  The past year saw a sharp rise in the number of civilians killed in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, a human rights group said.   An annual report from the Jerusalem-based B'Tselem showed that in 2011 Israeli forces killed a total of 105 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, of whom 37 were confirmed...
Mass murder in Kandahar
  As the 16 civilian victims of a US sergeant's shooting spree in southern Afghanistan are buried, new details of the horrific episode are emerging. Nine of those killed were children. Three were women.   The residents of Panjwai district in the volatile Kandahar province said they showed no resistance during the...
The causes of the protests in Afghanistan
  Most American media accounts and commentary about the ongoing violent anti-American protests in Afghanistan depict their principal cause as anger over the burning of copies of the Noble Quran, except that Afghans themselves keep saying things like this:   Protesters in Kabul interviewed on the road and in front of Parliament...
Inside Idlib: Assad crackdown grows in ferocity
  Winter still clings to the ancient cultivated hillsides of the northern Syrian province of Idlib. Nights are chillingly cold; mornings alternate between mist and feeble sun. Under the gnarled olive trees, the soil is naked and neatly raked.   Tens of thousands of trees in rows follow the contours of the...
US troop massacre "occurred in two stages"
  The U.S. Army sergeant accused of killing 17 Afghan civilians is believed to have carried out the rampage in two stages, returning to base after the first shootings and then going out to kill again, a U.S. official said on Saturday.   The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, did not...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved