JERUSALEM (AP) ― Palestinian protesters who pitched tents at a strategic West Bank site to protest plans to build a Jewish housing project there were evicted early Sunday, police said.
Spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said police evicted about a hundred protesters from the site after a court decision authorizing their removal.
Haaretz reported that the eviction was carried out despite a temporary High Court injunction preventing it.
Rosenfeld said no arrests were made during the half hour operation.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Saturday evening ordered roads closed leading to the area and had the military declare a closed military zone and shut off access.
Israeli border policemen arrest a Palestinian man at the entrance of the village of Zayem, as he was on his way to join an outpost between Jerusalem and the Jewish settlement of Maale Adumim in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on Saturday. (AFP-Yonhap News)
Palestinian activists erected tents in the area known as E-1 on Friday saying they wanted to “establish facts on the ground” to stop Israeli construction in the West Bank.
The Palestinian activists were borrowing a phrase and a tactic, usually associated with Jewish settlers, who believe establishing communities means the territory will remain theirs once structures are built.
Rosenfeld said the tents were not dismantled and that a decision on that would be made later in the day Sunday.
Activists said they want to build a village in the site, which they are calling Bab Al Shams.
Netanyahu’s office said Saturday night that the state was petitioning the Supreme Court to rescind an earlier injunction blocking the evacuation. Rosenfeld, the police spokesman, said he did not know which court had allowed the eviction.
Israel announced it is moving forward with the E-1 settlement after the U.N. recognized a de facto state of Palestine in the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem in November.
Palestinians say E-1 would be a major blow to their statehood aspirations as it blocks east Jerusalem from its West Bank hinterland. Palestinians are demanding these areas, along with Gaza, for their future state.
The construction plans drew unusually sharp criticism from some of Israel’s staunchest allies including the U.S. who strongly oppose the E- 1 project.
Israeli officials have said actual construction on the project may be years away if it ever gets off the ground, while Israeli critics have questioned whether Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu actually intends to develop E-1, or is pandering to hard-liners ahead of Israel’s Jan. 22 election.
In a separate incident Saturday, the Israeli military said soldiers shot at a Palestinian who “tried to infiltrate Israel” from the West Bank. The military said soldiers called on the man to stop, then fired warning shots in the air, and finally fired at his legs when he refused to stop.
Palestinian police said he later died of his wounds.
It was the second shooting death on the borders with the Palestinian territories in two days. On Friday, Palestinian officials in the Gaza Strip said a man was shot and killed near the coastal territory’s border fence. The Israeli military said he was part of a group that rushed the fence to damage it.