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'No one is here to help us': Palestinians watch on as Israeli diggers tear down their homes in East Jerusalem

A balcony of onlookers stare as three diggers gnaw at the four-storey building that was a fixture of their daily view.

The roads of Silwan's Wadi Qaddom neighbourhood are blocked off by Israeli police as residents watch the demolition in the valley from every vantage point. The block of flats was home to around 100 of their neighbours - many of them are now homeless.

An elderly woman sits at the bus stop near the police checkpoint closest to the demolition site. As she walks back down the hill, she looks back at the destruction.

Her cheeks are red with anger when she hails that God is their only protection. "Where are the Arab countries? No one is here to help us," she exclaims.

Of the 230 buildings demolished in East Jerusalem's Palestinian neighbourhoods in 2025, the block of roughly 13 flats is considered to be the largest and took 12 hours to completely demolish. The building was without a permit, like many in Silwan, and stood on land that was not licensed for residential use.

The residents were challenging long-standing demolition orders and applying for licensing when diggers arrived at dawn. The Jerusalem Municipality said the demolition of the building in Silwan was based on a 2014 court order, and that residents were granted extensions for the execution of the order and were offered various options in order to find a solution, but they declined to do so.

But an architect and urban planner from the Israeli NGO Bimkom (Planners for Planning Rights) - which is supporting the families in their bid to license the land of the building - says their time to act was cut short. "They were told that the demolition order would be implemented, and then they would get another six months' recourse to try to continue with their planning.

Six months is not enough for these planning processes. They take a long time," Sari Kornish tells us in front of the Jerusalem Municipality after meeting with the building residents' lawyer there.

Are permits granted for Palestinians in East Jerusalem? "Very, very few, and in recent years, since October 7, less and less," says Sari. "It has always been discrimination.

It has always been not enough." Far-right minister of national security Itamar Ben-Gvir posted on X about the building's demolition. He said: "Proud to lead the policy of demolishing illegal buildings - not only in the Negev, this morning in East Jerusalem (Silwan neighbourhood) a building that was built illegally and 100 people lived in it - was demolished! Strengthens the police and the district commander." Israel's annexation of East Jerusalem and parts of the West Bank is illegal under international law.

Read more from Sky News:Is Israel building a wall on Lebanese land?Mother of last hostage in Gaza speaks to Sky News On Sunday, Israel's far-right finance minister Bezalel Smotrich announced that the security cabinet approved 19 new Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank. Half a million Israeli settlers currently live in the West Bank, and over 230,000 live in East Jerusalem, where some are taking over homes instead of seizing land.

At least 500 Palestinians have lost their homes to lack-of-permit demolitions in East Jerusalem, and at least 1,000 people, including 460 children, are at risk of forced displacement from eviction cases filed against them in Israeli courts by settler organisations. In the East Jerusalem neighbourhood of Batn al Hawa in Silwan, Zuhair al Rajabbi looks out from his balcony at the homes of his neighbours.

The landscape is marked by demolition sites, and former homes of his neighbours are marked by Israeli flags. Settlers are busy renovating the rooftops to make their own.

"They have five children, and a grandmother was in one room. Downstairs, there was a family of seven children, with the wife and mother, in that one," he says, pointing at the roof of his neighbours.

As we watch, a woman quietly mops the dirty water into a hole in the fence and onto the roof of the house next door. "Look, they are even putting the dirty water on our neighbour's roof," Zuhair says with a sad bitterness.

"We used to live together like we live here at home - eating and drinking with them. It makes me sad when I see their home disappearing.".

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