Israeli forces raided the offices of the Palestinian governor of Jerusalem yesterday, authorities said, after reports of an investigation related to a land sale.
Israeli authorities confirmed the raid in Al-Ram, just on the other side of Israel’s separation wall from Jerusalem in the occupied West Bank, but provided few details.
It came after Israel’s detention of the Palestinian governor, Adnan Gheith, on October 20.
He was released two days later.
The Palestinian Authority’s (PA) Jerusalem affairs minister, Adnan al-Husseini, said that Israeli forces confiscated documents and material during the raid.
The same building houses his ministry and the governor’s office, both of which he said were raided in the first such Israeli action.
Palestinian government spokesman Yusuf Mahmud said it was a “dangerous escalation of the occupation and a flagrant violation of all international laws and agreements”.
Israel’s Shin Bet domestic security agency said in a statement a joint raid with police and the army was over “illegal activity by the PA in Jerusalem”.
It said “various materials were seized which will be examined by security bodies.”
Asked to specify which illegal activity, the Shin Bet said only that all PA activity in Jerusalem was illegal.
Israel occupied east Jerusalem in the 1967 Six-Day War and later annexed it in a move never recognised by the international community.
Member of Fatah movement’s executive council and minister in charge of the Jerusalem affairs for the Palestinian Authority Adnan al-Husseini (right) and Governor of Jerusalem for the Palestinian Authority Adnan Gheith pose for a photograph with damaged computers at the Palestinian Ministry of Jerusalem affairs’ headquarters in the town of Al-Ram, yesterday.