The Phnom Penh Post

Israel settler bill gets approval

- Jean-Luc Renaudie

ISRAELI parliament gave initial approval yesterday to a bill to legalise thousands of West Bank settler homes, a measure drawing internatio­nal anger and posing the government’s biggest test since 2015 polls.

The measure, which would apply to an estimated 2,000 to 3,000 Jewish homes in the occupied West Bank, requires three more full parliament­ary votes to become law. There have been reports that a behind-thescenes compromise could see the bill now stall.

The vote in the Knesset, or parliament, was 58-50.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu initially opposed the bill, fearing an internatio­nal backlash and legal implicatio­ns, but voted in favour yesterday. Netanyahu faces pressure to hold his right-wing coalition together and not be seen as moving against the powerful settler movement.

There has been speculatio­n that the bill could even cause the government to collapse – though a number of analysts caution that a compromise seems more likely for now.

The bill has been pushed by hardline members of Netanyahu’s coalition who defied his pleas not to move forward, while the country’s attorneyge­neral says that it will never hold up in court.

But those who support it say that the move is urgently needed to protect a Jewish outpost in the occupied West Bank called Amona. The outpost, where some 40 families live, is under a high court order to be demolished by December 25 because it was built on private Palestinia­n land.

The bill however goes far beyond legalising Amona and would allow an estimated 2,000 to 3,000 Jewish homes in the West Bank built on Palestinia­n land to be legalised.

Palestinia­n landowners would be offered compensati­on in exchange, but Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit says the move would undermine private property laws. US President Barack Obama’s administra­tion says it is “deeply concerned”.

“This would represent an unpreceden­ted and troubling step that’s inconsiste­nt with prior Israeli legal opinion and also break longstandi­ng Israeli policy of not building on private Palestinia­n land,” State Department spokeswoma­n Elizabeth Trudeau said.

The internatio­nal community considers all Israeli settlement­s in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem and the West Bank to be illegal, whether they are authorised by the government or not.

The Israeli government differenti­ates between those it has approved and those it has not.

The progress of the bill, approved earlier by a committee of ministers on behalf of the gov- ernment, has demonstrat­ed the power of the settler movement.

Netanyahu’s government is seen as the most right-wing in Israeli history, and key members of his coalition advocate annexing most of the West Bank while openly opposing the idea of a Palestinia­n state.

Opposition leader Isaac Herzog, who heads the Labour party, said the bill contravene­d Israeli and internatio­nal law while justifying “theft”.

Hardliner ‘dictated agenda’

Education Minister Naftali Bennett, who heads the hardline Jewish Home party and has been the driving force behind the settler bill, has made no secret of his position.

Last week after the election of Donald Trump as president in the United States, he called for the end of the idea of a twostate solution to the IsraeliPal­estinian conflict, the basis of years of negotiatio­ns.

He said “the era of a Palestinia­n state is over”.

Netanyahu’s government currently controls 66 of the 120 seats in parliament. Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon, whose centre-right Kulanu party holds 10 seats, has been key and had initially threatened not to vote.

In the end, he voted for yesterday’s initial backing but said he would withdraw support in the future if it “harms” the country’s high court.

The statement was a reference to Amona and the high court ruling against it – signalling that the bill could stall in the future if the outpost is not removed from it.

Some Israeli analysts have spoken of the outsized power Bennett has accumulate­d with the help of the settler movement, saying it could seem Netanyahu was serving in his cabinet rather than the other way around.

Bennett’s party has only eight seats in parliament.

But both men have little interest in new elections for now, a number of analysts said.

“Bennett knows that it will be difficult to have a government more right-wing than the current one,” a government official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

 ?? HAZEM BADER/AFP ?? Palestinia­ns, living near the Israeli settlement of Kiryat Arba on the outskirts of the West Bank city of Hebron, take part in a demonstrat­ion on August 24 to protest against the ongoing ban for Palestinia­ns to access a main road in front of Kiryat Arba.
HAZEM BADER/AFP Palestinia­ns, living near the Israeli settlement of Kiryat Arba on the outskirts of the West Bank city of Hebron, take part in a demonstrat­ion on August 24 to protest against the ongoing ban for Palestinia­ns to access a main road in front of Kiryat Arba.

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