Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Alarm Over Plan To Transfer Jerusalem Land To Russia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Alarm Over Plan To Transfer Jerusalem Land To Russia

    ALARM OVER PLAN TO TRANSFER JERUSALEM LAND TO RUSSIA
    By Julie Stahl

    CNSNews.com
    Tuesday, October 07, 2008
    VA

    Sergei's Courtyard in Jerusalem (Photo by Julie
    Stahl/CNSNews.com)Jerusalem (CNSNews.com) - To the dismay of many
    Israelis, the cabinet on Sunday voted to approve the transfer of nine
    acres of prime property in downtown Jerusalem to Russia.

    The building and garden, known as Sergei's Courtyard, were purchased
    by Russian royalty in the 1800s and have passed through a number of
    sovereign hands through the years.

    For more than a decade, Moscow has been demanding that the property
    be handed over to the Kremlin.

    Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, in Russia this week, has told
    Russian officials of the Israeli government's decision to turn the
    land over to Russia, a spokesman said/

    But many Israelis are unhappy that Olmert will get nothing in return
    for the "gift" that he's giving to the Russian government.

    There is a public outcry demanding to know why this step was taken,
    said Jerusalem City Councilman Nir Barakat.

    "I can clearly say that it's against the interest of the City of
    Jerusalem. It's weakening Jerusalem," Barakat told journalists in
    Jerusalem on Monday. "It [sets] a precedent for future demands of
    other people for land in the center of the city, and I think it's a
    bad deal."

    Israel considers Jerusalem to be its undivided, eternal capital.

    The Russians secured the compound from the Turkish Ottoman Empire in
    1858 to be used for pilgrims visiting the Holy Land. It was confiscated
    by the Turks during World War I, requisitioned by the British after the
    war, and passed on to Israel following its War of Independence in 1948.

    In 1964, Israel purchased 90 percent of the land from the Russian
    Orthodox Church. But Sergei's Courtyard, named for the Grand Duke
    Sergei Alexandrovich, the son of the tsar, was not included.

    When diplomatic relations between Israel and Russia were restored in
    the early 1990s, negotiations began on the property.

    Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said that former Prime
    Minister Ariel Sharon agreed to transfer the land as a way of
    improving relations between Israel and Russia and restoring a climate
    of cooperation and cultural affinity between the nations.

    "It was a gesture meant to create goodwill" and not a deal for
    which Israel would receive something tangible in return, Palmor
    told CNSNews.com.

    Some Israelis are trying to stop the deal from going through. The
    Legal Forum for the Land of Israel appealed to the High Court this
    week to stop the transfer of the property, said the Forum's attorney
    Itzhak Bam.

    The legal group argues that Olmert, as the prime minister of
    a caretaker government, has no authority to make such a big
    decision. Olmert resigned as prime minister last month, but has not
    yet stepped down.

    The court is expected to discuss the appeal on Sunday, said Bam.

    It's not clear that the property really does belong to Russia,
    Bam added. Russia should have taken its claim to court and not to
    political leaders, he said. But beyond that, Bam said, Israel has no
    business giving Russia such a gift.

    "Russia plays an extremely negative role in the Middle East and
    Israel. It sends weapons to Iran and Syria. The weapons [reach]
    the hands of Hezbollah [and are used against Israel]. Russia is not
    friendly to Israel. Russia strongly supports all the forces that
    [want to] destroy Israel," Bam charged.

    It is an act of "supreme stupidity" to give Russia the property as a
    gift. Russia will take Sergei's Courtyard and continue to sell weapons
    to Iran and Syria. It is clear that if Russia wants to reassert itself
    as a superpower in the Middle East, it will continue to sell weapons,
    he said.

    "[Getting the properties back] is seen by Russia as an important step
    in resuming its past greatness, back to its imperial role in the Middle
    East," said Bam, who immigrated to Israel as a child from the former
    Soviet Union. "Israel doesn't have to help them to make this step."

    Land in the Holy City

    Jerusalem is unique in the world. During its history, all the churches
    tried to consolidate their hold on the Holy City by buying land. So
    did the Russian Orthodox Church, said Israel Kimhi, from the Jerusalem
    Institute for Israel Studies.

    There was a kind of a competition between the European powers to
    acquire land, he said.

    A lot of land is owned by various churches here, with the Greek
    Orthodox Church being the biggest owner, Kimhe told CNSNews.com. The
    Italians, Germans, Russians and Armenians are among those who also
    owned land here.

    Around the Old City of Jerusalem alone, churches own thousands of acres
    in bits and pieces. They also own lands in Jaffa, Ramle, Nazareth,
    and near the West Bank city of Hebron but most of the properties are
    in Jerusalem, Kimhe said.

    The Greek Orthodox Church owns properties, which it has allowed
    Israel to use under to long-term lease agreements. Those properties
    include land on which the Knesset, the prime minister's residence
    and a Jerusalem neighborhood are built.

    The Israeli Ministry of Labor and the Society for the Protection of
    Nature in Israel are currently based at Sergei's Courtyard.

    Putin was so interested in this little corner of Jerusalem that he
    visited the compound when he was in Israel in 2005. "It's troubling
    that an international power is looking at such a small courtyard,"
    said Kimhe.

    In an editorial in the Jerusalem Post on Monday, the editors wrote
    that the Israeli government should be able to exercise the right of
    eminent domain over the "relics of yesteryear's imperialism" as it
    does over its own local residents.

    If Russia can claim to be Sergei's heir, even though his holdings were
    explicitly designated as private, then can't Israel claim the property
    that "the self-same Sergei forcibly took from 30,000 Muscovite Jews
    whom he cruelly expelled from the city mere months after his Jerusalem
    guest house went up?" the paper asked.

    There is no reason for Israel to turn Sergei's Courtyard into a
    possible "de facto extraterritorial Russian toehold in our capital,"
    it said.

    "Capitulation to Moscow in this matter, apart from being unlikely to
    purchase Russian goodwill on the critical Iranian issue, could well
    open up a Pandora's Box of other territorial demands," the Post said.
Working...
X