Communicated by the
Government Press Office
Jerusalem, 9 September 1998

Twenty PA Institutions, Including 11 "Ministries,"
Illegally in Jerusalem:
Oslo Accords Prohibit PA Activity in the Capital

 

The Agreement

Under the terms of the Oslo Accords, the Palestinian Authority
(PA) is prohibited from operating in Jerusalem.

The Interim Agreement ("Oslo 2"), which was signed on September
28, 1995, sets limits on the PA's jurisdiction, stating that it
does not include "issues that will be negotiated in the permanent
status negotiations: Jerusalem, settlements, specified military
locations, Palestinian refugees, borders, foreign relations and
Israelis" (Article XVII (1a)). Thus, the PA is barred from
exercising any authority or conducting any activity in Jerusalem.

In the Note for the Record which accompanied the Hebron Protocol
of January 15, 1997, the PA reaffirmed that, "Exercise of
Palestinian governmental activity, and location of Palestinian
governmental offices, will be as specified in the Interim
Agreement."

The Violations

The PA continues to intensify its activities in Jerusalem in
violation of the Oslo Accords. Following is a list of the 20 PA
institutions operating illegally in the city:

Palestinian "Ministries"

1) Ministry for Jerusalem Affairs - located in the Orient House
and run by PA Minister for Jerusalem Affairs Faisal Husseini, it
functions as a base for Palestinian activities in the city,
including organizing protests and press conferences, raising
funds and purchasing Jerusalem real estate on behalf of the PA.

2) Ministry for Religious Affairs - located on Shalshelet Street,
at the entrance to the Temple Mount in the Old City, it oversees
Muslim religious matters. PA Minister for Religious Affairs
Hassan Tahboub recently passed away and Yasser Arafat is expected
to nominate a replacement shortly. Ministry official Ibrahim
Kandelaft acts as PA representative to the Christian communities.
He regularly participates in church conferences and ceremonies
in Jerusalem.

3) Ministry of Education - the Ministry has taken control of the
private educational system in eastern Jerusalem which serves
nearly half of the city's Arab students. Schools run by the
Muslim Wakf, Christian churches and UNRWA operate with special
permits issued by the Ministry, and they utilize curriculums,
books and tests prepared by it. The Palestinian Legislative
Council recently approved the "First Palestinian Curriculum",
which will likely be introduced into schools run by the PA
Education Ministry.
4) Ministry of Health - the Ministry has intensified its
activities in Jerusalem, seeking to extend its control over
health institutions in the Arab sector (see #17 below). The
Ministry issues licenses to doctors operating in Jerusalem, and
the PA Health Minister recently declared that health institutions
in Jerusalem were an integral part of the Palestinian health
system and incorporated them into the PA's five-year development
plan.

5) Ministry of Finance - the Ministry has pressured Palestinian
merchants in eastern Jerusalem to register their businesses as
Palestinian firms under PA supervision and to report regularly
on their commercial activities for tax purposes. Merchants
refusing to do so have been threatened with having their products
boycotted in PA areas.

6) Ministry of Transportation - the Ministry issues licenses to
Palestinian taxis and transportation services operating in
Jerusalem, and the Ministry's Director-General is involved in
establishing public transportation lines between Sur Baher and
central Jerusalem as well as Bethlehem.

7) Ministry of Housing / Palestinian Housing Council - the
Housing Council, part of the PA Housing Ministry, oversees
planning for building projects in the PA areas and Jerusalem, and
engages in fundraising on their behalf. The Council provides
loans and aid to Palestinians in eastern Jerusalem. Members of
its board of directors include the PA's Minister of Justice and
Minister of Housing. The Housing Council's leadership has held
working meetings with PA Chairman Arafat.

8) Ministry of Trade and Industry/ Palestinian Small Business
Project - located in the Wadi Joz neighborhood, the Small
Business Project is an arm of the Ministry of Trade and Industry.
Its stated purpose is to assist and encourage Palestinian small
businesses. The PA uses it as a cover for disbursing funds to
various Palestinian projects in Jerusalem. Headed by Butina
Shahana.

9) Ministry of Youth and Sports - operating out of an office in
A-Ram, the Ministry runs various youth clubs and sports
activities in Arab- populated sections of Jerusalem. Under the
ministry's guidance, Jerusalem sporting groups serve as active
members of PA-supervised sports associations.

10) Ministry of Tourism / Higher Council for Arab Tourism - the
Higher Council is an arm of the Ministry of Tourism and it works
in conjunction with the Orient House, the Jerusalem District
Governor and members of the Palestinian Legislative Council to
promote Palestinian tourism projects in Jerusalem. Headed by Hani
Abu Dayah.

11) Ministry of Information / WAFA - WAFA, the official
Palestinian news agency, is subordinate to the Palestinian
Ministry of Information. It opened a branch on Ibn Abu Taleb
Street in the Friteh building in eastern Jerusalem.

Other PA institutions
12) Office of the Mufti of Jerusalem and the Holy Land - located
on the Temple Mount, it is the main office of PA Mufti Ikrama
Sabri. Sabri issues religious edicts, including a prohibition on
the sale of land to Jews and on applying for an Israeli passport.
He gives sermons at Al-Aksa Mosque in which he regularly denies
Israel's right to exist, glorifies suicide bombing attacks and
denies any Jewish connection to the Western Wall. Sabri also
travels to areas within pre-1967 Israel for working meetings with
Israeli Arabs.

13) Palestinian Security Forces - Palestinian security agents
conduct a range of activities in Jerusalem which include
detentions, intelligence- gathering, criminal investigations and
enforcing orders and instructions issued by PA Chairman Arafat.
In an effort to silence opponents of the PA, agents belonging to
Jibril Rajoub's Preventive Security Service have threatened and
intimidated Palestinian journalists and editors as well as
critics of PA Chairman Arafat. Rajoub's men intervene in business
and other disputes, and have sought to prevent Palestinians from
filing complaints with the Israel Police. They have also punished
perpetrators of "moral crimes". PA agents serve as bodyguards for
various Palestinian personalities in Jerusalem, such as PA Mufti
Ikrama Sabri, and provide security for Palestinian institutions
in the city. Palestinian security agents are also active on the
Temple Mount, where they occasionally provide security during
prayers. During Ramadan prayers, their presence on the Mount
increases. They frequently conduct patrols on major thoroughfares
in the eastern part of the city, both on foot and by car.

14) Jerusalem District Governor - The PA appointed Jamil Othman
Nasser to serve as Governor of the Jerusalem District. His office
is located in Abu Dis, outside Jerusalem's municipal boundaries,
but Nasser conducts activities within the city, providing its
residents with a range of services and involving himself in
various matters. For example, on October 23, 1996, he joined a
Force 17 in an attempt to wrest control over the Muslim religious
establishment on the Temple Mount from the Jordanians. He also
involves himself in resolving disputes among Palestinians in
Jerusalem.

15) Palestinian Legislative Council - many of the seven Jerusalem
representatives on the Palestinian Legislative Council operate
out of offices located in Jerusalem, among them Hatam Abdel
Kader.

16) Arab Studies Society - operates out of the Orient House under
the leadership of Faisal Husseini. Under the cover of a research
institute, it serves the interests of the PA by carrying out
surveys and obtaining information on its behalf.

17) Al-Mokassad Hospital - The PA recently seized control over
the hospital after the personal intervention of Yasser Arafat.
The PA fired the hospital's administron and appointed its own
people to replace it. The hospital and much of its staff operate
without the requisite licenses required by Israeli law.

18) Office of Mapping and Geography - operated in the Wadi Joz
neighborhood until Israel demanded its closure in August 1996.
The PA promised to relocate the office to Abu Dis, outside
Jerusalem's municipal boundaries. Despite this commitment, the
PA reopened the office in Orient House, where it continues to
operate under the direction of Khalil Toufakji.

19) Palestinian Energy Center - located in Beit Hanina, it
develops Palestinian energy strategy and programming. Established
by a "presidential decree" of Yasser Arafat on December 20, 1993,
its main office opened on September 26, 1994. On its internet
site on the World Wide Web, the PEC states, "In July 1996, the
center became part of the President's Office, and subject to the
decisions made by the President himself."

20) Palestinian Prisoners' Club - working under the authority of
the Palestinian Ministry of Welfare, it provides loans, aid and
professional training to former Palestinian security prisoners.
Though Israel ordered it to close, it continues to operate in
Jerusalem.

Recent examples of illegal PA activity in Jerusalem

- On July 1, 1998, the Palestinian Ministry of Culture sought to
hold a folklore festival at the al-Hakawati theater in eastern
Jerusalem. Israeli police canceled the event.

- On May 26, 1998, approximately 40 members of the PA's
Legislative Council (PLC), including six PA "Ministers", gathered
in the Old City of Jerusalem to protest Jewish construction. Abu
Alaa, speaker of the PLC, declared it to be an "historic event"
and announced that it was the first official PLC meeting convened
in Jerusalem. Israeli police dispersed the meeting.

- In March 1998, 16 surveyors working on behalf of the Israeli
Ministry of Transportation were detained in Jerusalem by the PA
and taken to Ramallah and Abu Dis for interrogation.

- In February 1998, the PA attempted to set up a security company
in the city to be used as cover for the operations of its
security forces.

- In February 1998, the PA Ministry of Youth and Sports attempted
to convene four conferences in Jerusalem.

- In December 1997, the PA attempted to conduct a population
census in eastern Jerusalem.