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Israeli
authorities have torn down several Palestinian houses in occupied east
Jerusalem, defying international calls to halt the demolitions in the
disputed city.
Gidi Schmerling, a Jerusalem municipality
spokesman, said the houses in the Shuafat, Zur Baher, Silwan and Jabel
Mukabar neighbourhoods were pulled down on Tuesday because they had
been built illegally.
“All the houses were demolished in accordance with a court order,” he said in a statement to the AFP news agency.
Palestinians
say that the municipality discriminates against them, making it
virtually impossible for them to get legal permits for new homes or
extensions to existing ones.
As
a result, thousands of effectively illegal structures have been built
in recent decades with Israel responding by destroying dozens of houses
each year.
Construction crackdown
Nir
Barkat, the mayor of Jerusalem, had vowed to crack down on illegal
construction in the city, including east Jerusalem, whose fate is one
of the thorniest issues in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
“The UN reiterates its call for an immediate and unconditional halt
to such actions and urges the state of Israel to protect the civilian
population in OPT [occupied Palestinian Territories] from further
displacement and dispossession.”
At least 600 Palestinians ave
been displaced by eveictions and demolitions since the beginning of the
year, according to OCHA, and many thousands more may be at risk.
The
United States, which is seeking to revive peace talks in the
long-standing dispute, called the latest demolitions “unhelpful”.
The forced evictions and demolitions
have raised tensions in the eastern half of the city, which
Palestinians see as the capital of any future independent state.
The
situation has prompted a number of protests and Palestinians have
attempted to challenge the municipality’s actions in the courts.
‘Irresponsible step’
An Israeli rights group, Ir Amim, said the demolitions were “an irresponsible step that could escalate the situation in the city and bring it to a new boiling point”.
Palestinians and human rights groups have condemned Israel’s demolition policy, accusing it of using the demolitions to shift east Jerusalem’s demographic balance.
“International bodies and the United Nations Security Council should intervene to stop Israeli authorities from carrying out these criminal actions,” Adnan al-Husseini, the Palestinian-appointed governor of Jerusalem, said.
A UN report in May showed that 1,500 demolition orders issued by the Jerusalem municipality were pending for illegal Palestinian dwellings.
The report said that if the orders were implemented, about 9,000 Palestinians would be displaced.
There are about 200,000 Jews living in East Jerusalem, alongside an estimated 250,000 Palestinians.