Insiders' Jerusalem - Urgent
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Rapport Des Chefs De Mission Diplomatiques De L'union
Rapport des Chefs de Mission Diplomatiques de l’Union Européenne sur Jérusalem 2017 Note de synthèse Les Chefs de Mission à Jérusalem et à Ramallah soumettent par le présent document au Comité Politique et de Sécurité le rapport sur Jérusalem pour 2017 (annexe 1) et une série de recommandations pour discussion pour renforcer la politique de l’Union Européenne sur Jérusalem Est (Annexe 2). L’annexe 3 contient des faits supplémentaires et des chiffres sur Jérusalem. Les développements intervenus en 2017 ont encore accéléré les difficultés de la solution « des deux Etats » en l’absence de processus de paix significatif. Les tendances précédentes, observées et décrites par les Chefs de Mission Diplomatiques depuis plusieurs années, se sont empirées. La mise à l’écart des Palestiniens de la vie ordinaire, politique, économique et sociale de la ville sont largement inchangées. Le développement d’un nombre record de plans de colonisation s’est poursuivi, y compris dans des zones identifiées par l’Union Européenne et ses Etats membres comme clés pour une solution « des deux Etats ». En même temps, les démolitions de logements palestiniens se sont poursuivies, et plusieurs familles palestiniennes ont été expulsées de leurs logements au bénéfice de colons. Les tensions autour du Dôme du Rocher / Mont du Temple continuent. Au cours de cette année, plusieurs projets de lois à la Knesset ont poursuivi leur avancée législative, qui, s’ils étaient adoptés, apporteraient des changements unilatéraux au statut et aux frontières de Jérusalem, en violation du droit international. En fin d’année, les Etats Unis ont annoncé leur reconnaissance de Jérusalem comme capitale d’Israël. -
Deliberately Planned
Deliberately Planned A Policy to Thwart Planning in the Palestinian Neighborhoods of Jerusalem Executive Summary Deliberately Planned This publication was produced with the generous assistance of The Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Tel Aviv; ifa (Institut für Auslandsbeziehungen), with resources provided by the German Federal Foreign Office; and the Moriah Fund. The content of this publication is solely the responsibility of Ir Amim and Bimkom. Deliberately Planned A Policy to Thwart Planning in the Palestinian Neighborhoods of Jerusalem February 2017 Written by Aviv Tatarsky and Architect Efrat Cohen-Bar Editing: Oshrat Maimon, Adv. English translation: Shaul Vardi English editing: Betty Herschman Graphic design: Liora Darom Research Assistant: Vered Keisar Cover photo - 13/6/2017, Iftar on ruins, Sur Baher, `jerusalem, photo: Activestills Executive Summary “Of course the authorities demolish their homes, because they build illegally.” This is how most Israelis respond when they hear about the demolition of homes, whether it happens in a Bedouin village in the Negev, in Qalansuwa in central Israel, or in East Jerusalem. This report examines three plans in East Jerusalem that reflect the efforts made by Palestinian residents to eventually build legally and eliminate the threat of demolition. Our examination of the obstacle course faced by these plans shows that the Israeli authorities do everything within their power to delay the process and ultimately thwart any detailed plan of significant scale, effectively preventing lawful construction by Palestinians. In most cases, a Palestinian family that tries to build a home in East Jerusalem is required to run from one office to the next, spend hundreds of thousands of shekels of its own money on planning, and then expend even more to submit an application for a building permit. -
Jerusalem: Facts and Trends 2009 / 2010
Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies Founded by the Charles H. Revson Foundation Jerusalem: Facts and Trends 2009 / 2010 Maya Choshen, Michal Korach 2010 Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies Publication No. 402 Jerusalem: Facts and Trends 2009/2010 Maya Choshen, Michal Korach This publication was published with the assistance of the Charles H. Revson Foundation, New York The authors alone are responsible for the contents of the publication Translation from Hebrew: Sagir International Translation, Ltd. © 2010, Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies The Hay Elyachar House 20 Radak St., 92186 Jerusalem [email protected] http://www.jiis.org Table of Contents About the Authors ............................................................................................. 7 Preface ................................................................................................................ 8 Area .................................................................................................................... 9 Population ......................................................................................................... 9 Population size ........................................................................................... 9 Geographical distribution of the population .............................................11 Population growth .................................................................................... 12 Sources of population growth .................................................................. 12 Birth -
INSTITUTE of JERUSALEM STUDIES JERUSALEM of INSTITUTE Winter 2017 Winter
Jerusalem: Fifty Years of Occupation Nazmi al-Jubeh Ribat in Palestine Kenny Schmitt Revocation of Residency of Palestinians in Jerusalem Tamara Tawfiq Tamimi Benefactresses of Waqf and Good Deeds Şerife Eroğlu Memiş Winter 2017 Jerusalem and Bethlehem Immigrant Families to Chile Bernard Sabella Resting in Peace in No Man’s Land at the Jerusalem War Cemetery Yfaat Weiss Filastinʼs Changing Attitude toward Early Zionism Emanuel Beška The Husayni Neighborhood in Jerusalem Winter 2017 Mahdi Sabbagh How Israel Legalizes Forcible Transfer: The Case of Occupied Jerusalem Report by Jerusalem Legal Aid and Human Rights Center (JLAC) Trump vs. a Global Consensus and International Law Infographics by Visualizing Palestine www.palestine-studies.org INSTITUTE OF JERUSALEM STUDIES Editors: Salim Tamari and Issam Nassar Associate Editors: Penny Johnson and Alex Winder Managing Editor: Carol Khoury Advisory Board Yazid Anani, A. M. Qattan Foundation, Ramallah Rochelle Davis, Georgetown University, USA Beshara Doumani, Brown University, USA Michael Dumper, University of Exeter, UK Rema Hammami, Birzeit University, Birzeit George Hintlian, Christian Heritage Institute, Jerusalem Huda al-Imam, Palestine Accueil, Jerusalem Omar Imseeh Tesdell, Birzeit University, Birzeit Nazmi al-Jubeh, Birzeit University, Birzeit Hasan Khader, al-Karmel Magazine, Ramallah Rashid Khalidi, Columbia University, USA Roberto Mazza, University of Limerick, Ireland Yusuf Natsheh, al-Quds University, Jerusalem Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Mada al-Carmel, Haifa Tina Sherwell, International Academy of Art Palestine, Ramallah The Jerusalem Quarterly (JQ) is published by the Institute of Jerusalem Studies (IJS), an affiliate of the Institute for Palestine Studies. The journal is dedicated to providing scholarly articles on Jerusalem’s history and on the dynamics and trends currently shaping the city. -
1 Tor Wennesland Special Coordinator for the Middle
As delivered TOR WENNESLAND SPECIAL COORDINATOR FOR THE MIDDLE EAST PEACE PROCESS SECURITY COUNCIL BRIEFING ON THE SITUATION IN THE MIDDLE EAST REPORT OF THE SECRETARY-GENERAL ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF UNSCR 2334 (2016) 25 March 2021 Madam President, Members of the Security Council, On behalf of the Secretary-General, I will devote this briefing to presenting his 17th report on the implementation of Security Council resolution 2334 (2016), covering the period from 11 December to 23 March. Madam President, Security Council resolution 2334 (2016) calls on Israel to “immediately and completely cease all settlement activity in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem” and to “fully respect all of its legal obligations in this regard.” Settlement activity has, nevertheless, continued during the reporting period. On 17 and 18 January, Israeli authorities advanced plans for some 800 housing units and tendered some 1,900 units in Area C settlements. An additional 210 units were tendered in East Jerusalem. Some 40 percent of these units are in settlements deep inside the occupied West Bank. Over 200 units are in outposts, illegal also under Israeli law, that Israeli authorities are regularizing retroactively. On 19 January, the Jerusalem District Court denied an injunction to freeze the tendering process for some 1,200 units in Givat Hamatos. The winning bids were announced on 20 January. Establishment of this new settlement will further consolidate a ring of settlements along the southern perimeter of Jerusalem that would significantly damage prospects for a future, contiguous Palestinian State. Demolitions and seizures of Palestinian-owned structures continued across the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem. -
Security Council Seventy-Sixth Year 8826Th Meeting Wednesday, 28
United Nations S/PV.8826 Security Council Provisional Seventy-sixth year 8826th meeting Wednesday, 28 July 2021, 10 a.m. New York President: Mr. De Rivière .................................. (France) Members: China ......................................... Mr. Geng Shuang Estonia ........................................ Mr. Lipand India ......................................... Mr. Kakanur Ireland ........................................ Mr. Flynn Kenya. Mr. Kiboino Mexico ........................................ Mr. De la Fuente Ramírez Niger ......................................... Mr. Abarry Norway ....................................... Ms. Juul Russian Federation ............................... Mr. Polyanskiy Saint Vincent and the Grenadines ................... Ms. King Tunisia ........................................ Mr. Ladeb United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland .. Dame Barbara Woodward United States of America .......................... Mrs. Thomas-Greenfield Viet Nam ...................................... Mr. Dang Agenda The situation in the Middle East, including the Palestinian question In accordance with the procedure set out in the letter by the President of the Security Council addressed to Permanent Representatives of Security Council members dated 7 May 2020 (S/2020/372), which was agreed in light of the extraordinary circumstances caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, this official record of the Security Council will be supplemented by a compilation of annexes (S/2021/685) containing the statements submitted -
Executive Summary on CAF Submission to the OHCHR
Executive summary on CAF submission to the OHCHR The Jerusalem Light Rail and CAF In 2019, the Jerusalem Transportation Masterplan Team (the Israeli public entity entitled to manage the public transport in Jerusalem, in conjunction with the Israeli Jerusalem municipality and the Israeli Ministry of Transport), awarded a €1.8bn contract for the expansion of Israel’s Jerusalem Light Rail (JLR) system to the TransJerusalem J-Net Ltd, a consortium established by the Israeli construction company Shapir, Superbus and CAF. Shapir is one of the 112 companies listed in a UN database of businesses involved in Israel’s illegal settlements. The project in question includes the extension of the existing ‘Red Line’ and the construction of a new ‘Green Line’ of the JLR, as well as the supply of vehicles and technical services for the maintenance of the transportation network. The existing ‘Red Line’ and the planned extensions aim to connect illegal Israeli settlements in occupied East Jerusalem with each other, as well as with the western part of Jerusalem and Israel. The existing ‘Red Line’ serves the illegal Israeli settlements of Giv’at Shapira, Givat HaMivtar and Pisgat Ze'ev in occupied East Jerusalem. The project in which CAF is currently involved will extend the ‘Red Line’ to the settlement of Neve Yakov in East Jerusalem. The new ‘Green Line’ to be constructed will connect the Hebrew University’s Mount Scopus campus in East Jerusalem to the Gilo settlement to the South of Jerusalem, intersecting with the ‘Red Line’ at the settlement of Giv’at Shapira. The new line will also benefit other illegal settlements in its vicinity, including the new Givat Hamatos settlement that has been approved for construction. -
Extreme Makeover? (I): Israel's Politics of Land and Faith in East Jerusalem
EXTREME MAKEOVER? (I): ISRAEL’S POLITICS OF LAND AND FAITH IN EAST JERUSALEM Middle East Report N°134 – 20 December 2012 TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS ................................................. i I. INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................. 1 A. JERUSALEM TODAY ..................................................................................................................... 1 B. ISRAELI OBJECTIVES: TERRITORY AND DEMOGRAPHY ................................................................. 4 C. JERUSALEM TOMORROW .............................................................................................................. 5 II. JERUSALEM’S THREE BELTS .................................................................................... 7 A. THE OUTER BELT: CONSOLIDATING GREATER JERUSALEM........................................................ 10 B. THE MIDDLE BELT: JERUSALEM’S RESIDENTIAL SETTLEMENTS ................................................ 13 C. THE INNER BELT: ISRAEL’S HOLY BASIN ................................................................................... 15 III. TEMPLE MOUNT ACTIVISM .................................................................................... 21 IV. TERRITORIAL CHANGES AND THE CONCEPT OF VIABILITY .................... 25 V. CONCLUSION: CAN THE EGG BE UNSCRAMBLED? ........................................ 27 APPENDICES A. MAP OF ISRAEL AND THE OCCUPIED TERRITORIES .......................................................................... -
Givat Hamatos and Mordot Gilo in Context Pending Settlement Schemes on Jerusalem’S Southern Flank October 15, 2011
Givat Hamatos and Mordot Gilo in Context Pending Settlement Schemes on Jerusalem’s Southern Flank October 15, 2011 Saturday, October 15, 11 Givat Hamatos and Mordot Gilo in Context Table of Contents Slide 3 - Givat Hamatos A - Plan 14295 Slide 4 - Mordot Gilo South - Plan 13261 Slide 5 - Plans under construction or awaiting tenders Slide 6 - Plans in advanced planning stages Slide 7 - Plans in initial planning stage Slide 8 - Pre-statutory plans Slide 9 - All pending plans on the southern flank Slide 10 - The buffer between Jerusalem & Bethlehem Slide 11 - The settlement surge throughout East Jerusalem Saturday, October 15, 11 Givat Hamatos A - Plan 14295 On October 11, 2011, Givat Hamatos A, Plan 14295, was published for public review. • This plan will allow for the construction of 2610 new residential units, more than 1700 of which are designated for a new Israeli settlement neighborhood. The remaining units are designated for the expansion of the Palestinian village of Beit Safafa. • The deposit of this plan became possible last August, when the Regional Planning Committee approved the master plan for Givat Hamatos A, Plan No. 5834A. • The 60-day objection period for the plan has now begun, after which hearings will be held and the plan can be approved. Once approved, construction can commence. • Plan 14295 does not “merely” go beyond the built-up area of an existing settlement; rather, it creates an entirely new Israeli settlement neighborhood, the first to be established in East Jerusalem since Har Homa. Saturday, October 15, 11 Mordot Gilo South - Plan 13261 The deposit of the Givat Hamatos plan comes on the heels of a similar step taken regarding the Gilo settlement neighborhood nearby. -
News Census Helps Palestinians in Jerusalem Numbers Game
Jerusalem Historical Facts & Figures Prior to the 1948 War, Palestinians formed the overwhelming majority in the Jerusalem district and owned most of the land. The last British Survey of Palestine (Dec. 1946) made the following demo- graphic estimates: Population pre-1948: 300,000 253,270 250,000 164,440 200,000 150,590 Jerusalem 150,000 99,320 102,520 100,000 65,010 Sub-Districts 50,000 110 160 0 Palestinians Jews Other Total Property Ownership 1948: West Jerusalem Jerusalem Sub-District Western Villages Palestinian 40.0% Jewish 2.0% Public 14.0% Palestinian 90.0% Public 33.9% Jewish 10.0% Palestinian 84.0% Jewish 26.1% (Source: A Survey of Palestine, Britain, 1946; Sami Hadawi, Palestinian Rights and Losses in 1948. London, 1988. NB: ‘Public’ includes land owned by Palestinian religious institutions and government land.) During the War of 1948, Jewish forces captured much of the territory assigned to the proposed Arab state, including 85% of Jerusalem (mainly in the city’s western part and surrounding neighborhoods). The Jordanian Arab Legion took control of the West Bank, including 11% of the eastern part of Jerusalem (including the Old City and adjacent villages). The remaining 4% of the Jerusalem area was considered no-man's land in which the UN established its headquarters. Some 64,000-80,000 Palestinians fled the western part of Jerusalem and the nearby villages. In June 1948, their property came under the control of the Israeli ‘Custodian of Absentee Property’. Some 40 Palestinian villages in and around Jerusalem were depopulated, many of them destroyed. -
Jerusalem: Facts and Trends 2013
Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies Founded by the Charles H. Revson Foundation Jerusalem: Facts and Trends 2013 Maya Choshen Michal Korach Inbal Doron Yael Israeli Yair Assaf-Shapira 2013 Publication Number 427 Jerusalem: Facts and Trends 2013 Maya Choshen, Michal Korach, Inbal Doron, Yael Israeli, Yair Assaf-Shapira © 2013, The Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies The Hay Elyachar House 20 Radak St., 92186 Jerusalem http://www.jiis.org Table of Contents About the authors .......................................................................................................... 5 Preface ............................................................................................................................. 6 Area ................................................................................................................................. 7 Population ....................................................................................................................... 7 Population size .................................................................................................................. 7 Geographic distribution of the population ........................................................................ 9 Population growth ............................................................................................................. 9 Age of the population ...................................................................................................... 10 Sources of Population Growth ................................................................................... -
Jerusalem Governorate
Ni'lin Talmon B Al Jalazun Camp Deir Qaddis Kharbatha Bani Harith Abu Qash 'Ein Yabrud Ofra At Tayba ARAB STUDIES SOCIETY Land SRuaist aKbairlkitayr for Rangeland - Jerusalem Governorate Dura al Qar' Al 'Auja Al Mazra'a al Qibliya Beit El (A + B) Land Research Center Al Janiya Surda Al Midya This study is implemented by: Talmon Modin Illit (Qiryat SLeafnedr )Research Center - LRC Rammun Rimmonim HashmonaimMattityahu Bil'in Funded by: Kafr Ni'ma Dolev Beitin Lapid The Italian Cooperation Shilta Menora Administrated by: Badiw al Mu'arrajat January 2010 Deir Ibzi' Kfar Rut United Nations Development Program UNDP / PAPP Deir Dibwan WWW.LRCJ.ORG GIS & Mapping Unit SaSffuapervised by: 'Ein 'Arik Ramallah Palestinian Ministry of Agriculture Beituniya Al Bira Pesagot Burqa Beit 'Ur at Tahta JeninMakkabim Beit Sira Tulkarm Tubas Kharbatha al Misbah Beit 'Ur al Fauqa Beit Horon B Kokhav Yaacov Maale Mikhmas Qalqiliya Nablus Beit Horon Rafat Kafr 'Aqab Mikhmas Salfit Beit Liqya At Tira Sha'ar Benyamin Givat Zeev Qalandiya Ramallah Jericho Jaba' Al Judeira Atarot Beit 'Anan Al Jib Bir NabalaAr Ram & Dahiyat al Bareed Mevo Horon Givat Hadasha Adam ( Geva Benyamin) Jerusalem Givon Givat Hadasha B Neve Yaacov Canada Park Bethlehem Har Shamual Qatanna Biddu Hizma Allon Neve Shamual Pisgat Zeev Beit Hanina al Balad Almon ( Anatot ) Har Adar (Givat HaRadar) Beit Hanina Kfar Adummim Hebron Beit Surik Pisgat Amir Beit Iksa Ramot Neve Brat Mizpe Yeriho Shu'fat Camp Shu'fat Mevaseret Tsiyon Rekhes Shuafat 'Anata Givat Shappira Ramat Eshkol Al 'Isawiya Hebrew