Israeli city chiefs in Jerusalem force Palestinians to demolish their own homes

Palestinians at the site of a family home destroyed by Israeli authorities in East Jerusalem’s neighborhood of Silwan, April 17, 2019. (AP Photo)
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Updated 25 August 2022
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Israeli city chiefs in Jerusalem force Palestinians to demolish their own homes

  • The alternative is to pay at least $25,000 for municipal contractors to do the job
  • Demolitions part of Israeli plan to remove Palestinian presence from East Jerusalem

RAMALLAH: Israeli city chiefs in Jerusalem are forcing Palestinians to demolish their own homes or pay at least $25,000 for municipal contractors to do the job.

The latest victim was Faraj Abu Ramoz, who was ordered on Wednesday to bulldoze the house in the Ras Al-Amoud neighborhood of Silwan where he has lived for seven years.

Abu Ramoz conceded defeat after Jerusalem municipality crews and Israeli police stormed the family home and threatened to demolish it themselves and make him pay for the work.

Activists say the demolitions are part of an orchestrated Israeli plan to remove the Palestinian presence from annexed East Jerusalem. Palestinians who want to build homes face high costs and obstructive bureaucracy, leaving them two options: either lose the right to live in their own city, or build without a permit and face eventual eviction.

More than 120,000 Palestinians have left Jerusalem and now live outside the Israeli “security wall,” and Ziad Hammouri, director of the activist group Jerusalem for Economic and Social Rights, said more than 20,000 demolition orders for homes in the city were “on the table of the occupation courts.” He said: “They can be implemented at any time, according to the vision of the occupation and its approval for implementation.”

Between 2004 and 2019, Israel demolished 968 homes and displaced 3,177 people, including 1,704 children. That figure does not include the punitive demolition of homes belonging to Palestinians who Israel accuses of “terrorism.”

Activists say Israel prefers Palestinians to demolish their own homes because of the embarrassing publicity when the destruction is carried out by Jerusalem municipality contractors backed by Israeli security forces.

Ekrima Sabri, the imam of Al-Aqsa Mosque, urged Palestinians in Jerusalem to refuse to demolish their homes. “Let the occupation carry out the crime with their own hands,” he said.


Libya’s security authorities free more than 200 migrants from ‘secret prison’, two security sources say

Updated 58 min 33 sec ago
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Libya’s security authorities free more than 200 migrants from ‘secret prison’, two security sources say

  • Security authorities had found an underground prison, nearly three meters deep, which the sources said was run by a Libyan human trafficker

BENGHAZI: Libya’s security authorities have freed more than 200 migrants from what they described as a secret prison in the town of Kufra in the southeast of the country after they ​were held captive in inhuman conditions, two security sources from the city told Reuters on Sunday.
The security sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that the security authorities had found an underground prison, nearly three meters deep, which the sources said was run by a Libyan human trafficker.
One of the sources said this person had not yet been detained.
“Some of the freed migrants were ‌held captive up ‌to two years in the underground cells,” ‌this ⁠source ​said.
The ‌other source said what the operation had found was “one of the most serious crimes against humanity that has been uncovered in the region.”
“The operation resulted in a raid on a secret prison within the city, where several inhumane underground detention cells were uncovered,” one of the sources added.
The freed migrants are from sub-Saharan Africa, mainly from Somalia ⁠and Eritrea, including women and children, the sources said. Kufra lies in eastern Libya, ‌about 1,700 kilometers (1,000 miles) from the capital ‍Tripoli.
Libya has become a transit ‍route for migrants fleeing conflict and poverty to Europe via dangerous ‍routes across the desert and over the Mediterranean since the toppling of Muammar Qaddafi in a NATO-backed uprising in 2011.
The oil-based Libyan economy is also a draw for impoverished migrants seeking work, but security throughout the ​sprawling country is poor, leaving migrants vulnerable to abuses.
At least 21 bodies of migrants were found in a ⁠mass grave in eastern Libya last week, with up to 10 survivors in the group bearing signs of having been tortured before they were freed from captivity, two security sources told Reuters.
Libya’s attorney general said in a statement on Friday the authorities in the east of the country had referred a defendant to the court for trial in connection with the mass grave on charges of “committing serious violations against migrants.”
In February last year, 39 bodies of migrants were recovered from about 55 mass graves in Kufra. The town houses ‌tens of thousands of Sudanese refugees who fled the conflict that erupted in Sudan in 2023.