Israeli court orders Palestinian family eviction

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JERUSALEM (AP) — An Israeli court on Monday ordered the eviction of a Palestinian family in a contested neighbourhood of east Jerusalem, the latest in a legal saga that has come to symbolise Israel’s conflicting claims to the holy city.

The Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood has been the focus of a long-running battle between government-backed Israeli illegal settlers and longtime Palestinian residents. It’s part of a broader trend of illegal settlers encroaching on Palestinian neighbourhoods in contested east Jerusalem, and previous attempts at evictions in Sheikh Jarrah have led to attacks and helped spark an 11-day war between the Israeli occupation and Hamas in 2021.

According to Monday’s ruling, the Diab family was given until July to vacate the house in Sheikh Jarrah. The family said it would appeal.

The Israeli magistrate court described the case as a simple dispute over real estate, ruling that the extended Diab family was squatting in a property owned by Jews and had no legal rights to it. Palestinians argued they have lived in the homes for decades.

The case against the family was launched by Nahalat Shimon Ltd, a Jewish illegal settler organisation that for years has been involved in legally fought efforts to evict Palestinian families from Sheikh Jarrah.

Israel occupied east Jerusalem in the 1967 Mideast war and annexed the area in a move that is not internationally recognised. Israel considers the entire city its capital, while the Palestinians seek east Jerusalem, home to the city’s most sensitive holy sites, as the capital of their future independent state.

Nahalat Shimon is trying to seize the property under an Israeli law allowing Jews to reclaim properties that were Jewish before Israel was established in 1948. Jordan controlled the area between 1948 and the 1967 war.

There is no equivalent right in Israel for hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who fled or were forced from their homes during the war surrounding Israel’s illegal establishment.

Saleh Diab, one of the men in the family, said his family of 20 has been living in the Sheikh Jarrah property since 1955. He told The Associated Press he was shocked by decision and thought his family was protected under a 2022 Supreme Court decision that halted the planned evictions of four other Palestinian families in the same area.

Monday’s decision comes at a time of heightened tensions in Jerusalem over Israel’s ongoing attacks in Gaza.

A high-profile eviction case in Sheikh Jarrah helped spark the 11-day war in May 2021. Israel’s firebrand National Security Minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, played a key role in rallying demonstrations in support of the settlers as an opposition lawmaker at the time.

In his current position, Ben-Gvir oversees the nation’s police force.

A Palestinian resident of the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood of east Jerusalem stands near a sidewalk, November 2, 2021. PHOTO: AP