Batn al-Hawa East Jerusalem Evictions 2026: 700 Palestinians Face Displacement
700 Palestinians in Batn al-Hawa face eviction following a 2026 Israeli Supreme Court ruling. Learn about the legal battle and the human cost of displacement.
Seven hundred residents. Twenty-one days. One neighborhood on the brink of erasure. In Batn al-Hawa, located in occupied East Jerusalem, dozens of families are bracing for what observers call the largest coordinated expulsion of Palestinians since 1967.
The Imminent Displacement in Batn al-Hawa
On January 12, 2026, the Israeli execution office issued official notices to 28 families, demanding they vacate their homes within 21 days. This follows a supreme court decision rejecting final appeals from 150 residents. According to the NGO Ir Amim, approximately 700 people across 84 families are now facing imminent forced displacement in the Silwan valley area.
Legal Framework and Settler Expansion
The evictions are rooted in a revived 19th-century land trust known as the Benvenisti Trust. While originally intended to settle poor Yemeni Jews, the trust is now managed by representatives of Ateret Cohanim, an organization dedicated to increasing Jewish presence in East Jerusalem. Critics point out a stark legal double standard: Israeli law allows Jews to reclaim property lost in 1948, but denies the same right to Palestinians who lost homes in the same conflict.
| Entity | Legal Status | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Palestinian Residents | Purchased land in 1966 | Imminent forced eviction |
| Benvenisti Trust | Revived 19th-century claim | Legal basis for displacement |
| Ateret Cohanim | Court-appointed managers | Settler move-in after evictions |
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