SHOTLIST
1. Zvulun Orlev of the settler-affiliated National Union Party arrives to a disputed house in Hebron
2. Orlev walks through the house
3. Orlev touring disputed home
4. Settlers praying in home
5. Close up on settler's gun in holster, tilt up to praying settlers
6. Interior of house, residential area
7. Settler woman with child
8. Tilt down to gun in bed
9. Young settlers outside the house
10. Sign reading: Judea is Jewish (Judea and Samaria is what Jewish settlers refer to the West Bank as)
11. SOUNDBITE: (English) Jewish settlers' leader Baruch Marzel:
"We bought this house with money and this is ours and we are going to fight on our right to live in Hebron. Because if we don't have a right to live in Hebron we don't have a right to live anywhere else in the land of Israel or all over the world."
12. Settlers and Orlev leave house
13. SOUNDBITE: (Hebrew) Zvulun Orlev of the settler-affiliated National Union Party:
"I am sure the ownership will be certified as Jewish ownership, and then there will be no need to fight over evacuation, one way or another."
14. Settlers outside of house
15. Israeli police stand outside house
16. Close up of Israeli police car
17. Settlers walk on road
18. Wide of several police cars and officers standing outside of the house
STORYLINE
Zvulun Orlev of the settler-affiliated National Union Party visited a disputed house in Hebron City at the West Bank on Monday.
The house has become a flashpoint for tensions between Jewish settlers and Palestinians.
Settlers say they bought the building from a Palestinian, but the Palestinian, Fayez Al-Rajabi, denies the claim.
Settlers moved into the house in March 2007.
Israel's Supreme Court has ordered settlers to leave the building while the ownership dispute is settled.
On Saturday, Deputy Defence Minister Matan Vilnai, said this order will be enforced.
The occupants have said they won't leave. The situation around the building has been tense. In recent days settlers have clashed with security forces and Palestinians.
Baruch Marzel, a leader of the settler community, said that the settlers will fight for their right to live in Hebron, and added that they bought these settlements with money.
Zvulun Orlev, claimed that Jewish ownership would be certified, and there would be no need of evacuation.
The disputed house sits on the edge of Hebron, next to the large Jewish settlement of Kiryat Arba.
The house is in a key location, providing a link between Kiryat Arba and settler enclaves in central Hebron, the largest Palestinian city in the West Bank.
The centre is under full Israeli control, while the rest of the city is administered by the Palestinian Authority.
In one incident, settlers punctured tires of several police vans, threw turpentine at a soldier, defaced headstones in a Muslim cemetery and wrote slogans insulting Prophet Muhammad on the facade of a mosque.
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