Market stalls at heart of fight over old Hebron
Topics: From the Wires, News
In this Wednesday, Aug. 22, 2012 photo, a dog walks across the street near Hebron's closed market in the Israeli-controlled area in the West Bank city of Hebron. Four stalls in a trash-filled, abandoned outdoor market have turned into hotly contested real estate in the center of biblical Hebron where several hundred ultra-nationalist Jewish settlers have been battling Palestinian residents for control, house by house and storefront by storefront. Settlers with a history of squatting on private Palestinian property in Hebron seized the stalls without permission 10 years ago and turned them into homes. The stalls' Palestinian tenants want Israel's Supreme Court to evict settlers who seized the properties a decade ago, but some in Israel's pro-settler government believe the small shops should remain in Jewish hands. (AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner)(Credit: AP)HEBRON, West Bank (AP) — Four stalls in a trash-filled, abandoned outdoor market have turned into hotly contested real estate in the center of biblical Hebron where several hundred ultranationalist Jewish settlers are wrestling with Palestinian residents for control, house by house and storefront by storefront.
The stalls’ Palestinian tenants want Israel’s Supreme Court to evict settlers who seized the properties a decade ago, but some in Israel’s pro-settler government believe the small shops should remain in Jewish hands.
Such an outcome would boost one of the most controversial endeavors of the Jewish settlement enterprise — tightening Israel’s hold over the center of the West Bank’s largest Palestinian city.
“The fight is over the character of Hebron and the old city area,” said Hagit Ofran of Peace Now, an Israeli anti-settlement group.
The first group of settlers moved into Hebron in 1968, a year after Israel captured the city, along with the rest of the West Bank, from Jordan. Over the years, the community has grown to about 800 people who live in several heavily guarded compounds, separated from the city’s 180,000 Palestinian residents by barbed wire, blast walls and hundreds of Israeli soldiers.
Settler leader Noam Arnon said the community hopes to expand in what he called “Jewish areas” in the center where Palestinian access is limited and which he said make up about 3 percent of the city. This includes real estate owned by Jews who lived in Hebron before Israel’s creation in 1948, he said.
Settlers say they are ready to co-exist in Hebron with the Palestinians, but argue that the city — which looms large in Jewish history but now serves as the center of Palestinian commerce in the West Bank — must remain under Israeli control. That runs counter to the Palestinian demand for a state in all the lands Israel captured in 1967 — the Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem, along with the West Bank.
Over the years, Israeli governments have maneuvered between the settlers and the Palestinians.
Israel transferred 80 percent of Hebron to Palestinian self-rule as part of interim peace deals in the late 1990s, but retained control over the rest, including the Tomb of the Patriarchs, a shrine sacred to Muslims, Christians and Jews as the traditional burial place of Abraham and other biblical figures.




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