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Written by Rory McCarthy in Jerusalem Rory McCarthy in Jerusalem
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Category: News News
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Published: 02 March 2010 02 March 2010
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Last Updated: 02 March 2010 02 March 2010
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Created: 02 March 2010 02 March 2010
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Jerusalem mayor unveils demolition plan
Israeli prime minister tells mayor to delay redevelopment and hold discussions with the Palestinian residents under threat
Jerusalem's mayor today unveiled a sweeping plan for an area of East
Jerusalem that would see at least 22 Palestinian homes demolished to
make way for a public park and tourist site.
But in a sign of the criticism the plan has already brought, the
Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, told the mayor to delay
demolitions and hold more discussions with the Palestinian residents of
the area.
Nir Barkat, the mayor, said Palestinians who lost their homes would be
offered homes in the area, but it is not clear who would pay for the
new houses.
"The plan is for the benefit of the residents," he said. "We have to
make sure the plan is successful because the alternatives are much,
much worse."
The proposal centres on an area called Bustan, part of Silwan in East
Jerusalem, close to the walls of the Old City. There are 88 Palestinian
homes on a site which the municipality says is an open area: none of
the homes have planning permission and all have demolition orders
against them.
Nearby is a building owned by Jewish settlers, known as Beit Yonatan,
which the authorities have ordered be evacuated and sealed. But there
is a strong movement now under way to keep the settlers in their home.
Since Israel captured and occupied East Jerusalem in the 1967 war it
has been difficult for the Palestinian residents of the east to obtain
planning permits. Thousands of Palestinians live with the threat of
demolition.
Daniel Seidemann, an Israeli human rights lawyer, said Barkat was
playing into the hands of right-wing Jewish settlers, who are
increasing their influence in East Jerusalem. "He is doing the bidding
of extreme settlers," Seidemann said. "These are partial demolitions
and replacing Palestinian families in order to allow for a construction
of a settler-inspired pseudo-Biblical park. He is making genuine public
needs subservient to the ideology of the settlers."
Tensions have risen in Jerusalem over the past week since Netanyahu
announced he intended to include two holy sites, revered by Jews and
Muslims, in the West Bank in a separate Jewish heritage plan.
Palestinians say they are concerned the heritage project could impinge
on Muslim freedom of worship. Netanyahu has said those fears are
misplaced and the project was aimed only at making renovations at holy
places in need of maintenance.
On Monday, an Israeli security guard was wounded by gunfire in Silwan.
A day earlier, Israeli police scuffled with dozens of rock-throwing
Palestinians outside al-Aqsa mosque in the Old City.