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The Bulldozers Arrive, and the Squeeze Is On in East Jerusalem

Israel: Palestinians are being eliminated by having no place to live, a mass depopulation by bloodless bureaucracy.

March 19, 1997|DAOUD KUTTAB, Daoud Kuttab is the director of the Institute of Modern Media at Al Quds University in Jerusalem. He was honored last year by the Committee to Protect Journalists, based in New York. E-mail: dkuttab@baraka.org

JERUSALEM — Nothing can ruin the sensitive process of reconciliation between Israelis and Palestinians faster than attempts to build new Jewish settlements or to change the status quo in Jerusalem. Settlements and Jerusalem are two of the five unresolved issues that were to be addressed in final status talks to begin later this month.

The decision by the Israeli government to proceed this week with a large housing development in East Jerusalem, on land illegally occupied by Israel in 1967, runs contrary to the letter and spirit of the interim peace agreement between Israel and Palestinians. This is not my opinion; it is the opinion of the entire world as seen last week by the U.N. resolutions overwhelmingly condemning the project.


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According to an Israeli former member of the Jerusalem City Council, Sarah Kaminker, only 13% of the land of East Jerusalem is available for Palestinian residence. The rest either has Jewish settlements--existing or planned--or is restricted.

More than 130,000 Israeli Jews are now living in settlements built by the Israeli government in East Jerusalem during the last 29 years. During this same period, Israel has not built a single apartment for Palestinians and instead is trying to remove Palestinians altogether from Jerusalem.

The settlement planned for Jabal Abu Ghneim, which the Israelis call Har Homa, will alter both the geography and the demography of the Holy City. Building 6,500 units exclusively for Jews in Arab East Jerusalem aims at creating a Jewish majority and at the same time blocking any physical connection between Jerusalem and the West Bank areas destined to become the Palestinian state.

What adds insult to injury is that the Netanyahu government is attempting to depopulate Jerusalem of its indigenous Palestinians.

I am one of tens of thousands of Palestinians who are threatened with loss of residency in Jerusalem. Even though I have lived here most of my 41 years, I am no longer certain that I will be allowed to continue.

Last August, I was scheduled to travel to South Africa for a conference on tolerance. When I applied for a return visa, I was told by an Israeli official that my residency ID was no longer valid, and that if I traveled, I would be allowed to return to Jerusalem only as a tourist. I appealed to the Israeli High Court and a one-time exception was made for me to travel. My residency status still has not been resolved.

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