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Israeli Demolitions Fuel Palestinian Anger in East Jerusalem

The sound of demolition machinery echoes through the hills below Jerusalem's Old City as an Israeli excavator tears into another Palestinian home in the al-Bustan area of Silwan.

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Since late 2023, 59 properties have been demolished in the neighbourhood, where residents say the pace of destruction has accelerated while international attention has focused on conflicts in Gaza, Iran and Lebanon.

Homes Reduced to Rubble in Silwan

"There is no future. They destroyed the future and everything else," said 58-year-old Fayez Awad, speaking from the only remaining floor of his home.

"We spent our whole lives building this house. This is all we managed to achieve in life. They brought us back to zero again, me and my children."

Dispute Over Land and Planning

East Jerusalem has remained at the centre of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict since Israel captured it from Jordan in the 1967 Middle East War and later annexed it, a move not recognised by most countries.

For around two decades, Jerusalem's municipality has pursued plans to transform al-Bustan into a biblical-themed park known as the King's Garden, to be operated by a Jewish settler organisation. Demolition orders issued by Israeli courts have recently been enforced at a faster rate.

The municipality said it was acting "for the benefit of all city residents" and aimed to create a park in an area lacking public open space.

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Palestinian residents argue that obtaining Israeli building permits in East Jerusalem is extremely difficult. According to the Israeli planning rights group Bimkom, Palestinians received only 7% of newly approved housing in Jerusalem in 2025 despite making up about 40% of the city's population.

About half of al-Bustan's homes have now been demolished. Many residents facing demolition orders have chosen to destroy their own properties to avoid substantial municipal fines and demolition costs.

"We're being given warnings that in the coming months they'll destroy the rest of the houses," said community activist Fakhri Abu Diab, whose own home has already been demolished.

Evictions and Settlement Expansion

Israel has built roughly 160 settlements housing around 700,000 Jewish residents across the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Settlements and the transfer of populations into occupied territory are considered illegal under international law, a position rejected by Israel.

According to the United Nations, around 200 Palestinian households, comprising about 900 people, are currently facing eviction proceedings in East Jerusalem, most of them initiated by settler groups.

In nearby Batn al-Hawa, Palestinian families are being removed from homes where they have lived for decades under laws that allow Jewish ownership claims dating from before Israel's establishment in 1948. Palestinians do not have equivalent rights to reclaim property inside Israel.

Israeli anti-settlement groups say the changes are reshaping the city's demographic and political landscape.

Yonatan Mizrahi of Peace Now said Silwan's archaeological and religious significance has made it a focus for projects highlighting Jewish historical connections to the area.

Families Fear Losing Their Last Homes

Elsewhere in the Old City, another legal battle has placed members of the Basha family at risk of eviction from a building linked to a Jewish religious school.

The family traces its presence there to the British Mandate era, when Mohammed Basha Abdulghani was allowed to live in part of the property after protecting it during periods of unrest.

Although a court recently granted a temporary injunction while an appeal is considered, family members fear they could still lose their homes.

"What will we do?" asked 76-year-old Mufid Basha. "We've nowhere else to go. This is the only home I've ever known."

Rights groups also warn that land registration measures introduced in East Jerusalem in 2018 are contributing to Palestinian displacement.

Calls for International Action

During a recent visit by foreign diplomats to Silwan, residents urged the international community to intervene.

The European Union recently described the situation in East Jerusalem, particularly in Silwan, as "dire" and reiterated its opposition to Israeli settlement activity.

Among those facing uncertainty is 97-year-old Yusra Qweider, who has been displaced three times since 1948. After living in her current home for more than 50 years, she now faces an eviction notice.

"They want to kick us out of here," she said. "I am sick and I can't walk. We are counting on God."

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Adapted by ASEAN Now. Source 12 June 2026

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placnx Platinum Member

placnx

Advanced Member
13 hours ago, Nick Carter icp said:

Muslims go to Mecca and Medina for their Holy sites , Al Aksa is like third division

Actually Muslims originally prayed in the direction of Jerusalem.

Nick Carter icp Star Member

Nick Carter icp

Advanced Member
2 minutes ago, placnx said:

This would mean eternal war with the world's Muslims and probably lead to the expulsion of Jewish Israelis for millennia.

How would the Muslims expel Jews from Israel ?

They've been trying to do that for 80 odd years now

placnx Platinum Member

placnx

Advanced Member
2 hours ago, Thingamabob said:

Jews were living in the Holy Land nearly 2000 years before Islam was created. In those days those who we now call Palestinians were known as philistines.

From Google:

The Name "Palestine": The geographic term Peleset found in Egyptian records evolved into Greek (Palaistine) and Latin (Palaestina). The Romans revived the name Syria Palaestina in the 2nd century CE to designate the region.

The ancient Philistines were eventually conquered, assimilated into the broader Levantine population by the Neo-Babylonian and Persian periods, and ceased to exist as a distinct ethnic group.

Modern Palestinians are predominantly an Arabic-speaking population whose ancestry is indigenous to the Levant, drawing deep roots from centuries of mixed populations, cultures, and empires that inhabited the region.

Thingamabob Diamond Member

Thingamabob

Advanced Member
10 minutes ago, placnx said:

From Google:

The Name "Palestine": The geographic term Peleset found in Egyptian records evolved into Greek (Palaistine) and Latin (Palaestina). The Romans revived the name Syria Palaestina in the 2nd century CE to designate the region.

The ancient Philistines were eventually conquered, assimilated into the broader Levantine population by the Neo-Babylonian and Persian periods, and ceased to exist as a distinct ethnic group.

Modern Palestinians are predominantly an Arabic-speaking population whose ancestry is indigenous to the Levant, drawing deep roots from centuries of mixed populations, cultures, and empires that inhabited the region.

Your point is ?

placnx Platinum Member

placnx

Advanced Member
51 minutes ago, Nick Carter icp said:
  • The Status Quo: The Israeli government strictly maintains the historical "status quo," which gives the Muslim Waqf administrative control over the Temple Mount and prohibits non-Muslim prayer.

Since 2000 and Ariel Sharon's invasion of the Haram al-Sharif a/k/a Temple Mount, an event that triggered the Second Intifada, successive Israeli governments have increasingly let extremist ultra-orthodox violate the "status quo". After October 7th there have been brutal incidents perpetrated by Israeli government forces, even inside the mosque!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Aqsa_clashes

Nick Carter icp Star Member

Nick Carter icp

Advanced Member
5 minutes ago, placnx said:

Since 2000 and Ariel Sharon's invasion of the Haram al-Sharif a/k/a Temple Mount, an event that triggered the Second Intifada, successive Israeli governments have increasingly let extremist ultra-orthodox violate the "status quo". After October 7th there have been brutal incidents perpetrated by Israeli government forces, even inside the mosque!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Aqsa_clashes

Two different things there .

The Muslim Waqf control the Religion side of things .

The IDF control the security

placnx Platinum Member

placnx

Advanced Member
34 minutes ago, Nick Carter icp said:

How would the Muslims expel Jews from Israel ?

They've been trying to do that for 80 odd years now

We started with your hypothetical of the construction of a Third Temple (presumably after demol;ition of the Al Aqsa Mosque). A lot of opposition would happen before that could take place, and I expect that even many Jews worldwide would object. The more like ly scenario is that the world will force Israel to withdraw to the 1967 borders. The Israeli people will learn to restrain or imprison their extremists, maybe even expel them to their home countries.

placnx Platinum Member

placnx

Advanced Member
4 minutes ago, Nick Carter icp said:

Two different things there .

The Muslim Waqf control the Religion side of things .

The IDF control the security

Your response is a deflection. Everyone insterested should read the Wikipedia entry. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Aqsa_clashes

Nick Carter icp Star Member

Nick Carter icp

Advanced Member
9 minutes ago, placnx said:

Your response is a deflection. Everyone insterested should read the Wikipedia entry. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Aqsa_clashes

The Religious aspect is different to the security aspect .

The Muslim Waqf still control the religious aspect

Bannoi Silver Member

Bannoi

Advanced Member

If Jerusalem or at least the part that incorporates all the most important religious sites was turned into a holy city like the Vatican City in Rome it just might solve most or at least some of the problems.

JBChiangRai Diamond Member

JBChiangRai

Advanced Member
On 6/12/2026 at 11:54 PM, Nick Carter icp said:

Yes, ''John" , as I said .

It was originally the Jews Holy site from before Islam became into being . Muslims then came along and built over it and declared it their Holy site ( To stop jews ever reclaiming Jerusalem)

“Peter” the use of real names is forbidden here.

Packer Gold Member

Packer

Advanced Member
On 6/13/2026 at 12:23 PM, placnx said:

This would mean eternal war with the world's Muslims

It wouldn't be eternal war.

The ratio of Muslims to Jewry is 2000:16

2 billion Muslims against 16 million Jewry. Half of which (Jewry) are soft non-Israelis.

Every Jew on the planet would be butchered. Not one Jew would be left.

placnx Platinum Member

placnx

Advanced Member
On 6/16/2026 at 7:30 AM, Packer said:

It wouldn't be eternal war.

The ratio of Muslims to Jewry is 2000:16

2 billion Muslims against 16 million Jewry. Half of which (Jewry) are soft non-Israelis.

Every Jew on the planet would be butchered. Not one Jew would be left.

I remember one history professor in our Near Eastern department remarking in the leadup to the 1967 war that in around 300 years Israel will be disappeared by a bomb. They had better not mess with the Islamic and Christian sites and not expel Palestinians, either. Those are their shields against immolation. Muslims don't have a problem with Jews per se. It is the Zionist ideologues that have been causing problems for 100+ years.

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