A Portrait of the New
Israeli Minister of the Interior:
Demolition of Palestinian
Homes is His Baby
With the change of government
in Israel, those in the international and local human rights community
dealing with Palestinian residency rights issues must get used to a new
set of faces on the Israeli side.
The Ministry of the Interior,
as that branch of government responsible for maintaining population registries
in Israel and for approving or denying applications for family reunification
has tremendous influence over residency and demographic policies, both
on a long-term and day-to-day basis. The Ministry of the Interior is also
closely connected to the town planning process in Israel, another administrative
function which has a crucial impact on demographic trends.
With all this in mind, ARTICLE
74 would like to acquaint its readers with Israel’s new Minister
of the Interior, Eli Suissa, whose sterling work in the past with regard
to housing rights for Jerusalem’s Palestinian residents certainly augurs
well, now that he is in charge of all the Ministry’s various functions:
Eli Suissa, of the Shas
party, was placed in charge of the Jerusalem District of the Ministry of
the Interior ten years ago, after his predecessor in this position, Raphael
Levy, was arrested and imprisoned.
In the last years, Suissa
accumulated a lot of experience in the field of housing and urban planning.
According to the Legal Advisor to the Jerusalem District Planning and Construction
Committee, Advocate Tami Reva: “I think that [Suissa] really believed those
controversial plans that he placed before the Commission were justified.”
Those “controversial plans”
referred to by Reva involved various plans for building settlements in
East Jerusalem, sponsored by such voluntary associations as Atert Cohanim,
an organization whose purpose is to promote Jewish settlement in the Old
City of Jerusalem, as well as ‘to enhance the Jewish presence on the Temple
Mount’, and eventually build the Third Temple at that location. Suissa
was also behind the plans to build a Jewish neighborhood at Ras al-Amud,
as well as near Herod’s Gate and in the City of David - all sites in East
Jerusalem in close proximity to the Old City. All these proposals, which
Suissa placed before the Planning Commission, were opposed by the then
Mayor of Jerusalem, Teddy Kollek. It’s not that Kollek opposed building
Jewish settlements in East Jerusalem, but rather that he adhered to the
traditional Labor Party aversion to building Jewish settlements “in
the middle of heavy concentrations of Arab population.” When the Labor
Party came to power in June 1992, most of Suissa’s pet projects were put
on the back-burner. However, these plans may now be revived.
Suissa, was also in charge
of the Committee which dismissed all the objections to the planned new
settlement (to be known as “Har Homa”) at Jabal Abu Ghneim, in annexed
southeast Jerusalem, on lands belonging mainly to Beit Sahour and Bethlehem
residents. In this case, Suissa and Kollek saw eye-to-eye.
During his term as the Interior
Ministry official in charge of the Jerusalem District, the number of new
housing units slated for Palestinian-Arabs in northern Jerusalem was reduced
from 18,000 to 5,000. When Kollek announced he would cease signing orders
calling for the demolition of homes built “illegally” by Jerusalem Palestinians
as long as no building permits for them were being issued, Suissa announced
that he would sign the orders himself.
[Some of the information
in this article was taken from the Hebrew daily, Ha’aretz, 18-6-96] |