Israeli east Jerusalem plan gets cool Palestinian reception
JERUSALEM — A landmark half-billion-dollar Israeli plan to develop Palestinian areas of east Jerusalem and hoist residents out of poverty is getting a cool reception from the very people who are supposed to benefit.
Israel says it hopes the program will improve living conditions in impoverished Palestinian neighbourhoods and grant residents access to Israel’s robust economy. But the city’s long-neglected Palestinian community views the project with deep skepticism and mistrust, fearing it is a way of cementing Israel’s control over the eastern sector after more than 50 years of occupation.
“All these projects have nothing to do with improving our lives,” said Ziad Hammoury, who heads the Jerusalem Center for Social and Economic Rights, an advocacy group. “It’s about controlling more and more in east Jerusalem.”
The “Leading Change” program, launched in May, aims to reduce the huge social gaps between the Palestinian neighbourhoods and the overwhelmingly Jewish western part of the city. After years of neglect, Palestinian neighbourhoods suffer from poor infrastructure, neglect and subpar public services, and nearly 80 per cent of the city’s Palestinian families live in poverty.

