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West Bank demolitions and displacement: An overview | December 2022

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HIGHLIGHTS

  • In 2022, 953 Palestinian structures were demolished or seized across the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, the highest number since 2016. With 1,031 people being displaced as a result, the 1,000 threshold was crossed for the third year in a row. However, there were 14 per cent fewer people displaced than in 2021.

  • In East Jerusalem, 51 per cent of the structures were demolished by their owners following the issuance of demolition orders by the Israeli authorities. This is an uptrend compared with an average of 34 per cent in the previous five years.

December Highlights

  • In December 2022, 101 Palestinian-owned structures were demolished or seized, the third largest figure in 2022. As a result, 65 people, including 34 children, were displaced.

  • Twenty-three structures or 23 percent of the targeted structures were seized/confiscated, rather than demolished, up from a monthly average of 13 for the preceding months in 2022.

Overview

In December 2022, the Israeli authorities demolished, forced people to demolish, or seized 101 Palestinian-owned structures across the West Bank, including East Jerusalem. Twenty-four of these had been provided as humanitarian aid. As a result, 65 people, including 34 children, were displaced, and the livelihoods or access to service of over 2,300 others were affected. All but one of the structures were targeted for lacking building permits, which are nearly impossible for Palestinians to obtain in Area C and East Jerusalem.

In one of the incidents, in the Wadi as Seeq (Ramallah) area, the Israeli authorities demolished one structure and seized another nine without prior notice. The structures included five homes. Four of the structures were provided as humanitarian aid in response to previous demolitions. As a result, four households comprising 25 people, including 17 children, were displaced, and one refugee household comprising seven people, including five children, were otherwise affected. Another three donor-funded structures were demolished or seized in the communities of Isfey al Fouqa (Massafer Yatta, Hebron) and Al Jiftlik - al Musaff (Jericho), both in areas designated by the Israeli authorities as “firing zones” for military training. In the former community, the Israeli authorities seized two donor-funded tents and one donor-funded latrine unit provided in response to the Israeli authorities’ demolition of the community’s school on 23 November 2022, on the grounds that it lacked a building permit. The school served 21 students from three communities in southern Hebron.

Of the structures targeted in Area C, 23 were seized by the Israeli authorities without warning. This is a 77 per cent increase compared with a monthly average of 13 in the preceding monthsof 2022. Seizure procedures do not oblige the authorities to provide prior notice, thus preventing affected people from objecting in advance. The Israeli Civil Administration has referred to such practices as “a strategic tool”, which circumvents legal processes. Overall, in 2022, the number of structures seized without warning in Area C (110), is 60 per cent lower than the 35 recorded in 2021.

Additionally, during December, in the Area C communities of At Tuwani, Ma’in and Tatrit (all in Hebron) and Furush Beit Dajan (Nablus), the Israeli authorities demolished a total of six structures based on Military Order 1797, which provides only a 96-hour notice and very limited grounds for legally challenging a demolition. A total of 228 Palestinian-owned structures, including one school, have been demolished based on this order since it came into effect in July 2019.

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