Settlers threaten to forcibly evict East Jerusalem Palestinians
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                  World Jewish News

                  Settlers threaten to forcibly evict East Jerusalem Palestinians

                  Beit Yonatan, a building where Israeli settlers live in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Silwan Photo by Daniel Bar-On (Haaretz.com)

                  Settlers threaten to forcibly evict East Jerusalem Palestinians

                  23.06.2010, Israel

                  Israeli settlers in East Jerusalem on Wednesday threatened to forcibly evict four Palestinian families they claim are living on property belonging to Jews in the neighborhood of Silwan.
                  The settlers said they would hire private security firms to implement the evictions if the four families, which include 40 individuals, do not leave by July 4.
                  The Palestinian families are living in a structure that was once a Yemenite synagogue in Silwan, located near the neighborhood's controversial Beit Yonatan structure.
                  Beit Yonatan, a seven-story residential structure, was built illegally in the heart of the predominantly Palestinian neighborhood by the nationalist association Ateret Cohanim. The court issued an evacuation order for the building last July, which has yet to be enforced.
                  Meanwhile, the Beit Yonatan settlers claimed on Wednesday that police have not evicted the Palestinian families due to political constraints and have warned they would take matters onto their own hands next month.
                  Silwan, home to some 50,000 Palestinians and 70 Jewish families, has been at the center of a battle between Israeli Jews and Palestinians in their bids to retain control over East Jerusalem.
                  The Jerusalem municipality on Monday approved preliminary plans to demolish 22 Palestinian homes in the neighborhood as part of a plan to build a tourist center there.
                  The U.S. State Department criticized the decision, calling it the kind of step that undermines trust fundamental to progress in the proximity talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.
                  Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat has said the plan gives a much-needed facelift to Jerusalem's decaying al-Bustan neighborhood, which Israel calls Gan Hamelech, or the King's Garden.
                  The plan calls for the construction of shops, restaurants, art galleries and a large community center on the site where some say the biblical King David wrote his psalms.
                  The 22 displaced families would be allowed to build homes elsewhere in the neighborhood, though it's not clear who would pay for them.

                   

                  By Nir Hasson

                  Haaretz.com