General

How Israel helps settler groups grab Palestinian land

A Palestinian woman stands near graffiti spray-painted on her home in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood in East Jerusalem in September 2011.

 Ryan Rodrick BeilerActiveStills
by Charlotte Silver, Electronic Intifada, 12 May 2016.


A Palestinian woman stands near graffiti spray-painted on her home in
the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood in East Jerusalem in September 2011. Ryan Rodrick Beiler ActiveStills

Last November, Muhammad Abu Ta’ah arrived at his property in Sheikh Jarrah in
occupied East Jerusalem only to find it had been
fenced off by contractors.

On the three-dunum
plot of land, construction had begun on a four-story, 70-office building that
would make up the new headquarters for the private settler group Amana.

The property had once been part of an expansive 4,000 dunums (nearly 1,000 acres)
of land which Israel expropriated in 1968, one year after its military occupied
East Jerusalem. On that land, the state built the French Hill and Ramat Eshkol
settlements, in addition to a government compound.

Much of this land had been owned by the Abu Ta’ah family. Until now,
they had retained this last slice of property, located between a Palestinian
hospital and a main thoroughfare, rented part of it to a car business and
turned the rest into a large parking lot.

But now it belongs to Amana, the development arm of the Gush Emunim settlement
movement, which has been
integral to Israeli
colonization of many parts of the occupied West Bank.

Amana also owns Al-Watan, a
company based in the West Bank that buys Palestinian land for Jewish settlement
and which has been involved in forging Palestinian signatures in dubious land
purchases.

A new investigation by
the settlement watchdog group
Peace Now reveals how
several Israeli ministries, led by the
Israel Land Administration (ILA), went
to extraordinary lengths to steal the Abu Ta’ah family’s last piece of land in
order to give it to Amana.

The investigation shows that at every step of the way, the ILA helped
Amana circumvent bureaucratic roadblocks to ensure the land became theirs.

“First they exempted Amana from the duty to hold a tender,” Hagit Ofran
of Peace Now
told the Tel Aviv newspaper Haaretz.

“Then they approved its building plan without it having any real rights
to the land. Later the finance minister signed an expropriation in order to
retrospectively whitewash the transfer of the land to Amana, and finally, today
too, the state continues to fiercely guard this illegal behavior in court,
instead of righting the wrongs and returning the land to its owners.”

The series of measures taken to expropriate the land are considered
illegitimate by even some of the occupation’s biggest defenders.

The Abu Ta’ah family’s attorney Steven Berman served for 16 years as a
legal advisor to the Jerusalem municipality, often defending the city against
Palestinian lawsuits against illegal land expropriations.

“I have nothing against expropriating lands, which is a necessary
process,”
he told Haaretz.

“But in this case they deviated from all rules. What happened here is
that ILA officials inappropriately used their power to help a close political
body.”


The
theft        


The misdeeds go back to 1992, at the very beginning of then Prime
Minister
Yitzhak Rabin’s
government, when the ILA agreed to give the land to Amana without a tender. But
as Peace Now documents, the ILA was not the owner of the land.

The plan was put on hold, Peace Now speculates, because the Rabin
government had published a study scrutinizing the ILA’s misdealings with
settler organizations in East Jerusalem. The
Klugman report found that
the ILA had transferred 68 plots of land to rightwing settler organizations
Elad and Ateret Cohanim.

But the agreement was revived in 1997, when Benjamin Netanyahu was
first installed as prime minister.

That year, Amana submitted its construction scheme to the Planning
Administration claiming that the ILA was the owner of the land, but leaving off
their signature as they knew they weren’t the legitimate owners.

Several months later, the Planning Administration noticed the missing
signature and twice requested it from Amana before receiving a copy purportedly
signed by the ILA’s Amalia Abramovich.

Peace Now intimates that Abramovich’s signature may have been forged, as
that was proven to have happened in another case.

Amana also sent the Planning Administration a letter from the ILA’s
Avraham Nawi, claiming the land was expropriated.

The deal met another obstacle in 2005, when the Land Registrar refused
to register the plot because there was no record that the plot was ever
expropriated.

Nevertheless, in 2009, finance minister Yuval Steinitz
signed the expropriation of an invented parcel of land including the Abu Ta’ah
property that the ILA submitted for expropriation, therefore finalizing the
theft of the land.

In court

The government is now defending the expropriation as the family takes it
to court.

A Jerusalem court rejected the family’s petition in March. Despite
agreeing that there were “flaws” in the approving plan, judge Arnon Darel found
that invalidating the agreement would cause too much damage.

Now the Abu Ta’ah family is appealing the expropriation to the Israeli high court.

Jews have settled on Palestinian property ever since Israel’s
expropriation of approximately
24,000 dunums
(6,000 acres)
of privately owned land in the aftermath of its 1967
de facto annexation of East Jerusalem.

Though just a sliver of the original 4,000 dunums expropriated in 1968, the back door deal
between the government and a private settler group demonstrates the active hand
the Israeli state has played in the continued dispossession of Palestinian land
in East Jerusalem.

The Israeli rights group Ir Amim states that
“the settlement enterprises in the middle of Palestinian neighborhoods over the
last 30 years were seemingly carried out by private bodies, but were in fact
rooted in government policy and enabled by it.”

The group has said the land grab in Jerusalem
“create[s] a contiguous swathe of right-wing Jewish housing cutting through
Sheikh Jarrah and sever[s] areas beyond it from the Old City and historic
basin.”

Meanwhile, on Monday, dozens of Israeli settlers occupied a
large residential building near the Old City and then performed prayers in its
courtyard that overlooks al-Aqsa mosque.