JERUSALEM, May 6, 2015 (WAFA) – Israeli
settlers late Tuesday took over three apartments in the Jerusalem neighborhood
of Silwan, under the pretext they are absentee’s property, according to local
sources.
Witnesses told WAFA that a group of
settlers guarded by police officers arrived in Silwan at midnight, and broke
into three vacant apartments owned by the Abu Nab clan. Police said the
settlers had won a court ruling establishing that the three apartments are the
property of Yemenite Jews long time ago.
to be noted, settlers have taken over 40
apartments in Silwan since last September.
The Absentees’ Property Law (1950) is one
of Israel’s major legal instruments for seizing Palestinian property,”
according to Stop The Wall campaign, a local organization monitoring
Israeli violations of Palestinian rights.
“By classifying every citizen or persons
present in an “enemy” territory or country as an “absentee” vis-à-vis property
in Israel, the law has served to confiscate the land and real e-state left
behind by the Palestinians who were forcibly displaced 1948. It is still in
effect and used to confiscate Palestinian properties more than six decades later,”
the campaign reports.
On February 9, a Jewish settler group attempted to
evict a house rented by a Palestinian family in the neighborhood of Aqabat
al-Khalidiya in Jerusalem’s Old City, citing that the house belongs to a Jewish
family and that settlers have the right to inhabit it instead of a Palestinian
family.
The house’s owner, Ahmad Sub Laban, said
his family rented the house in 1956 from Jordan’s then Custodian of Enemy
Property (CEP), 11 years before Israel occupied the eastern part of Jerusalem.
The house was originally owned by Jewish migrants before the CEP assumed
control of Jewish-owned property upon the Israeli-Arab war in 1948.
Settlement activities and Israeli
settlers in the West Bank and occupied East Jerusalem are illegal under
international law.
M.N./T.R.