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Palestinian cartographer Khalil Tafakji (centre), who runs a Palestinian map office, is detained by Israeli regime police officers in Beit Hanina in occupied East Jerusalem. Image Credit: Reuters

Occupied Jerusalem: Israeli police closed on Tuesday a Palestinian research centre in occupied Jerusalem and arrested its director, a prominent cartographer, accusing him of working for the Palestinian security services.

The office of cartography in occupied East Jerusalem was shut down for six months, a police statement said.

Israeli officials accused its head, Khalil Tafakji, of working with the Palestinian National Authority to monitor the sale of land by Palestinians to Israeli Jews in occupied East Jerusalem.

Israel seized East Jerusalem in the 1967 Six Day War and later annexed it in moves never recognised by the international community.

Israel sees the whole city as its united capital, while the Palestinians view East Jerusalem as the capital of their future state.

Israeli internal security minister Gilad Erdan said Tafakji’s work had been “part of the Palestinian [National] Authority’s plan to undermine our sovereignty in Jerusalem and terrorise Arabs selling real estate to Jews in the city.”

“I’ll continue to act assertively to prevent Palestinian sovereignty in Jerusalem.”

Selling land to Israeli colonists is punishable by death under Palestinian law.

Senior Palestinian official Saeb Erekat condemned in a statement the “illegitimate” closure and arrest, calling it part of Israel’s attempts to “erase any Palestinian presence in the city”.

Several organisations promoting Israeli colonies in occupied East Jerusalem have used so-called straw men to carry out transactions.

Palestinians accuse the Israeli government of seeking to Judaise occupied East Jerusalem.

Around 200,000 Israelis now live in colonies in occupied East Jerusalem.

Tafakji has been mapping the Palestinian territories for decades and is regularly quoted by both international experts and the world press.

He works within Orient House, which was long a hub of Palestinian culture in Jerusalem under the Palestine Liberation Organisation but was closed in 2000 by Israel.