Dubai Telegraph - Palestinian village fears Israel wartime demolitions

EUR -
AED 3.868537
AFN 71.620209
ALL 97.950819
AMD 409.769812
ANG 1.898363
AOA 962.135844
ARS 1056.132615
AUD 1.620969
AWG 1.895834
AZN 1.78956
BAM 1.951855
BBD 2.126801
BDT 125.875575
BGN 1.955865
BHD 0.397019
BIF 3051.766226
BMD 1.053241
BND 1.414634
BOB 7.294326
BRL 6.08078
BSD 1.053371
BTN 88.861967
BWP 14.389846
BYN 3.447133
BYR 20643.526502
BZD 2.123229
CAD 1.47341
CDF 3017.536331
CHF 0.931485
CLF 0.037148
CLP 1024.993284
CNY 7.631155
CNH 7.635756
COP 4630.574707
CRC 534.918801
CUC 1.053241
CUP 27.91089
CVE 110.195333
CZK 25.286206
DJF 187.18182
DKK 7.460197
DOP 63.718952
DZD 140.90118
EGP 52.399065
ERN 15.798617
ETB 129.15373
FJD 2.392753
FKP 0.831341
GBP 0.832392
GEL 2.891189
GGP 0.831341
GHS 16.755561
GIP 0.831341
GMD 74.780419
GNF 9089.471526
GTQ 8.131564
GYD 220.376658
HKD 8.19815
HNL 26.525871
HRK 7.513042
HTG 138.370321
HUF 409.815604
IDR 16748.798723
ILS 3.940386
IMP 0.831341
INR 88.841904
IQD 1380.272525
IRR 44346.718265
ISK 145.547018
JEP 0.831341
JMD 166.962529
JOD 0.746853
JPY 163.533064
KES 136.39559
KGS 91.090038
KHR 4265.626639
KMF 489.520171
KPW 947.916634
KRW 1475.027337
KWD 0.323914
KYD 0.877822
KZT 523.249903
LAK 23118.643367
LBP 94317.745007
LKR 306.46057
LRD 190.373597
LSL 19.042743
LTL 3.109947
LVL 0.637095
LYD 5.129021
MAD 10.50607
MDL 19.170162
MGA 4912.316773
MKD 61.527988
MMK 3420.886164
MNT 3578.913364
MOP 8.444991
MRU 42.040124
MUR 48.788581
MVR 16.272486
MWK 1828.426565
MXN 21.392707
MYR 4.709571
MZN 67.365372
NAD 19.042561
NGN 1770.013882
NIO 38.757047
NOK 11.653587
NPR 142.180968
NZD 1.793239
OMR 0.405514
PAB 1.053281
PEN 3.997025
PGK 4.179365
PHP 62.141356
PKR 292.932722
PLN 4.336019
PYG 8249.326141
QAR 3.834588
RON 4.977409
RSD 117.040376
RUB 105.954529
RWF 1443.993614
SAR 3.954154
SBD 8.815122
SCR 14.317269
SDG 633.529824
SEK 11.622732
SGD 1.415288
SHP 0.831341
SLE 23.79937
SLL 22085.945242
SOS 601.925178
SRD 37.316754
STD 21799.965279
SVC 9.216546
SYP 2646.299832
SZL 19.042732
THB 36.484091
TJS 11.217932
TMT 3.696876
TND 3.315082
TOP 2.466802
TRY 36.304095
TTD 7.131585
TWD 34.279102
TZS 2793.720606
UAH 43.43472
UGX 3887.143155
USD 1.053241
UYU 45.029839
UZS 13555.213906
VES 48.221363
VND 26778.656189
VUV 125.042906
WST 2.940218
XAF 654.630727
XAG 0.033951
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.846437
XDR 0.80148
XOF 651.428296
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.211456
ZAR 19.077367
ZMK 9480.434765
ZMW 29.151355
ZWL 339.14322
  • BCC

    -0.4000

    137.78

    -0.29%

  • JRI

    -0.0900

    13.17

    -0.68%

  • SCS

    -0.0350

    13.055

    -0.27%

  • CMSC

    -0.0530

    24.512

    -0.22%

  • BCE

    -0.2700

    27.04

    -1%

  • NGG

    -0.3600

    63.22

    -0.57%

  • GSK

    -0.0400

    33.42

    -0.12%

  • RIO

    0.0000

    62.43

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.0636

    24.28

    -0.26%

  • RBGPF

    -0.5400

    59.65

    -0.91%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1300

    6.56

    -1.98%

  • BTI

    0.0600

    36.99

    +0.16%

  • AZN

    -0.7750

    63.025

    -1.23%

  • BP

    -0.1060

    28.984

    -0.37%

  • VOD

    0.0250

    8.945

    +0.28%

  • RELX

    -0.3700

    44.92

    -0.82%

Palestinian village fears Israel wartime demolitions
Palestinian village fears Israel wartime demolitions / Photo: Alberto PIZZOLI - AFP

Palestinian village fears Israel wartime demolitions

Dabbing away tears, Ghadeer al-Atrash stood before her bulldozed home in a Palestinian village abutting Israeli settlements, a fate feared by hundreds of villagers as Israel ramps up demolitions during wartime.

Text size:

Destruction of homes built without Israeli-issued permits, which campaigners say are nearly impossible for Palestinians to obtain due to Israel's restrictive planning policy, have roiled occupied territories for years.

But campaigners say the wartime demolitions illustrate the wider impact of the war, triggered by the October 7 attack by Hamas militants against Israel, on Palestinian communities beyond the Gaza Strip.

Atrash, a divorced mother-of-two, scrounged together about 200,000 shekels ($54,000) to build a house in Al-Walaja, a village carved into hillside terraces and olive farms that is divided between the Israeli-occupied West Bank and east Jerusalem.

"My son dropped out of college. We saved money, borrowed money," Atrash, 43, told AFP, standing in front of concrete debris from her house that was demolished last February.

"I had built it to get away from exhaustion and misery, for stability in my life."

Dozens of Al-Walaja families with pending demolition orders fear the same fate.

Since October 7 the government has accelerated demolitions in Palestinian areas, in what campaigners call collective punishment that threatens to inflame tensions already heightened by the fighting.

Since the attack, 444 Palestinians in Area C -- West Bank territory under full Israeli control -- and annexed east Jerusalem have been displaced following demolitions due to a lack of permits, according to the United Nations humanitarian agency (OCHA).

This represents a 36 percent increase in displacement since the beginning of 2023, OCHA said.

The Al-Walaja part impacted by demolitions falls under east Jerusalem, where the Israeli activist group Ir Amim said destructions jumped more than 50 percent in the three months since October 7 compared to the rest of 2023.

- 'Anxiety and fear' -

"Whether I'm sitting, sleeping or eating, I keep thinking about what they are going to do to us and our house," said Mahmoud Abu Khiarah, a 28-year-old construction worker and father-of-three who built a house in 2017 on ancestral land in Al-Walaja.

"There's anxiety and fear."

Municipal authorities in Jerusalem redirected AFP's request for comment to the finance ministry and COGAT, a military body responsible for civilian affairs in the Palestinian territories. Neither of them responded.

The Israeli Supreme Court has stayed demolition orders for 38 houses in Al-Walaja, which has a population of about 3,000. At least six houses that are not part of the freeze, including Abu Khiarah's, face an imminent risk, Ir Amim said.

The Hamas attack which triggered the war resulted in about 1,140 deaths in Israel, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.

Israel's retaliatory bombardment of Gaza has claimed at least 22,835 lives in the Palestinian territory so far, according to the health ministry in Hamas-ruled Gaza.

Fuelling fears of a broader escalation, the jump in demolitions comes amid rising settler violence, military raids and movement restrictions facing Palestinians in the occupied territories.

At the heart of the demolitions is what OCHA calls Israel's "discriminatory" planning policy.

Since 1967 when Israel occupied the West Bank and annexed east Jerusalem, authorities never made a zoning plan for the Al-Walaja area under its jurisdiction, making it impossible for residents to build legally.

"Residents have to choose between uprooting themselves from Al-Walaja, where they were born and their families live, to building without a permit and risking demolitions," Aviv Tatarsky, an Ir Amim researcher, told AFP.

- 'Live on streets' -

Israel claims the whole of Jerusalem as its undivided capital. Many Palestinians view demolitions as an attempt to push them out of annexed east Jerusalem, which they want as the capital of a future Palestinian state.

The sprawling Jewish settlements of Gilo and Har Gilo -- illegal under international law -- have already encroached on Al-Walaja land.

The village is also hemmed in by the kilometres-long West Bank barrier -- built by Israel in the early 2000s against Palestinian violence -- which has cut off residents from pastureland and freshwater springs.

Many Palestinians with demolition orders say they choose to tear down their own homes to evade high government levies and the cost of renting the municipality's bulldozers.

"Israel, as the occupying power, is obligated to protect the Palestinians," Greg Puley, acting head of OCHA's office for occupied Palestinian territories, told AFP.

"Palestinians must have access to a fair and equitable planning system."

Al-Walaja's residents have taken it upon themselves to raise funds to develop a zoning plan with the help of an Israeli planner.

The detailed proposal, seen by AFP, was submitted to Israeli planning authorities in early October.

In early December, the Supreme Court granted a request by authorities for up to four months to review it, legal records show.

While they do so, the threat of demolitions persists.

"If they demolish our house we will live on the streets," Abu Khiarah said, cradling his toddler in his arms.

H.Hajar--DT