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Wednesday, August 03, 2011

Court orders Jews expelled from Migron

For the first time ever, an Israeli court has ordered a Jewish town 'dismantled' and its inhabitants expelled. On Tuesday, the court ordered the destruction of the town of Migron - right off highway 60 - by March 2012.
The ruling, given unanimously by Supreme Court Justice Dorit Beinisch, Justice Miriam Naor and Justice Salim Joubran, noted that the West Bank outpost was built without government permission, illegally and on private land owned by Palestinians. The outpost, located in the Binyamin region of the West Bank 5 km. north of Jerusalem, was first constructed over a decade ago, with NIS 4.3 million from the Ministry of Construction and Housing, but without the proper authorization.

In her 2005 report, Talia Sasson said the outpost was constructed on private Palestinian property, a designation which since has been accepted by the state.

Peace Now first petitioned the High Court to evacuate Migron in 2006, on behalf of Palestinians with claims to the property.

The state agreed in principle to evacuate the outpost, but has yet to make good on that pledge.

The matter has returned to court a number of times with the state requesting more time to come up with a plan to evacuate the outpost and rehouse its residents.

In Tuesday's ruling, the Justices remarked that the High Court had acceded to repeated requests by the state to be allowed additional time to deal with the outpost, in order to "allow dialog and come to a mutual agreement over a solution".

The Justices noted that a total of five hearings had been held, in which various plans were discussed regarding the evacuation of the West Bank outpost, which the state does not dispute is illegal.

In 2008, the Council of Jewish Communities of Judea, Samaria and the Gaza Strip struck a deal with the government, in which it promised that Migron would be voluntarily removed to the nearby settlement of Geva Binyamin (Adam) within two years.

However, in July's hearing the High Court learned that plans to evacuate Migron residents to Adam were not progressing at a reasonable pace, and that the chances of that plan being a success still in doubt, not least because Migron residents themselves had not agreed to relocate.

In Tuesday's ruling, the Justices slammed the state for failing to draw up a reasonable schedule for evacuating Migron to the nearby Adam settlement, despite repeated court hearings to discuss the matter and repeated requests by the state to be granted extensions to implement the plan.

The Justices also noted that the state had not negotiated directly with Migron residents to gain approval for the plan, but had done so through the Yesha Council, and that Migron residents had not expressed their agreement to the plan to move them to Adam.

"The residents of Migron have so far refrained from responding or presenting themselves for a hearing before us and have also refrained from making any statement that transferring them to the new neighborhood in Adam is acceptable to them - and the state has not asked them to make such a statement," wrote the Justices.

The fact that three years had passed without agreement since the plan was originally raised "indicates that it will not come to fruition in the forseeable future," the Justices added.

With the Adam relocation plan in doubt even three years after it was first suggested, the Justices wrote, "there is no justification to preserve the illegal situation and to continue to violate Palestinian residents' property rights."
If they don't reach an agreement with the Migron residents, I suspect that they are going to have a little trouble finding someone to enforce an expulsion order. Unless Defense Minister Ehud Barak is willing to call in the Yassamnikim (SWAT team), which are largely 'minorities' (Arabs and Bedouin), I have my doubts the expulsion order can be enforced. Prime Minister Netanyahu's government will not be happy calling in the Yasamnikim. And as President Jackson remarked in 1832, "John Marshall has made his decision; now let him enforce it!";[119].

Heh.

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4 Comments:

At 6:10 AM, Blogger Nomadic100 said...

I don't quite get it. Apparently the court became frustrated with the government's refusal to comply with its mandates.

You, as a lawyer, have not provided a defense of the government's position.

I'm not a lawyer and live in Wisconsin. I usually find myself agreeing with your cogent arguments, but not this time. Am I misunderstanding something?

-Charles

 
At 6:59 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Bring back Isabel and Ferdinand!

Happy 9th of Av, Stupid Jews!

 
At 7:12 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Um, The Kings of the White Tribe of Euroland will could well enforce the Supreme Court edict. One more domino falling in the forest as Bibi agrees to go back to 1949 demarcation lines (with swops) as long as the Palis concede to someone, somewhere, through פרשנויות, רמזים, או סודות that Euroland will stay "Jewish" (sorta, for now, maybe, till next week....)

http://www.jpost.com/DiplomacyAndPolitics/Article.aspx?id=232185

Bibi, just tell us what words will come out of your mouth at the end of the strip tease and save us the bother....

 
At 2:54 PM, Blogger Sunlight said...

This definitely is an internal matter for you guys. I remember reading that one of the most stridently anti-security barrier Palestinian families actually don't own the land they have farmed for two generations. They just moved onto it and started farming. The barrier apparently separates their dwellings from (some of?) the land, which they don't own.

This is the kind of thing that would benefit from a detailed internet based GIS map, with layers by year, of title search data. If you want to instill the removal of human conflict by enforcing ownership, then it needs to be consistent. So, if the Israeli govt does carry out an eviction notice process on the Migron people, then it would be logical to start by carrying out an eviction process on, say, the Palestinian family complaining about going through the barrier to farm land they don't own. Or some other squatting (if you have a land ownership and private property system, then that's what it really is) people. It seems like the issue is the govt picking winners and losers and not enforcing their policy on "favored" groups. Ugh.

 

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