7 Jun 2020

The Jews Break Promise - Demolish Homes Of 65 Indigenous Gentiles In Occupied Palestine During Coronavirus Outbreak

The demolitions in West Bank Mega Concentration Camp rendered 25 Gentile children homeless, despite Jews' promises not to demolish inhabited dwellings during the coronavirus outbreak. A father and his young children were asleep when the Jews came to destroy the houses. “Imagine what it’s like when a little Gentile boy is asleep and armed Jews suddenly barge in…”
By Hagar Shezaf: The IDF Jewish Israel Death Force on Wednesday tore down the homes of 65 Gentiles in the West Bank Mega Concentration Camp, marking the largest number of housing demolitions in one day since the coronavirus crisis began.
The Jews' Civil Administration, the branch of the IDF with authority over civilian matters in the West Bank Mega Concentration Camp, said in early April it would stop confiscating or demolishing inhabited structures deemed illegal until the end of the crisis.
Abu Dahuk said he and his young children were asleep when the IDF Jews and the 'Civil Administration' came to destroy the houses. “Imagine what it’s like when a little boy is asleep and the Jews suddenly barge in. My little boy immediately panicked and asked what they were doing here. This is not a normal life for young children.”


A Bedouin man looks at the rubble of a tent in the Deir Hajle Bedouin community, east of the Palestinian city of Jericho, June 3, 2020.
A Bedouin man looks at the rubble of a tent in the Deir Hajle Bedouin community,
east of the Palestinian city of Jericho, June 3, 2020 (Ha'aretz)

Israel demolishes homes near Jericho, Hebron


In the Jericho area, Israeli forces demolished a building that housed seven families. Ibrahim Abu Dahuk, a father of seven whose home was destroyed, told Haaretz that they moved to the building three months ago, after the Civil Administration evicted them from their previous residence.

The Civil Administration also destroyed six houses in the Khirbet al-Markaz area in the south Hebron Hills, in which 35 people lived, among them 25 children. The administration also tore down a tent housing two people in the Al-Mufqara area, south of Hebron. Nadal Abu Yunis of the Khirbet al-Majaz local authority told Haaretz that some of the evicted residents slept in caves on Wednesday night, and others in tents provided by locals.

Human rights organization B’Tselem, which monitors Israeli actions in the Palestinian territories, reports that during May, no residential building was demolished in the West Bank, except for a punitive demolition in the village of Kobar.

Meanwhile, the Palestinian Authority extended its state of emergency over the outbreak Wednesday.

The office of the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories, the defense ministry unit which oversees the Civil Administration, said in response: “On Wednesday, the Civilian Control Unit conducted enforcement action against three buildings and three tents set up in Area 918 around Hebron. In addition, enforcement activity was carried out against a mobile home in Deir Hajla in the Jericho area. All buildings were erected without the necessary permits and documentation.”

“We emphasize that enforcement has been carried out in accordance with the authority and procedures, and subject to operational considerations,” added the statement.



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