National Post (National Edition)

ISRAEL APPROVES PLANS FOR THOUSANDS OF NEW SETTLEMENT UNITS IN THE WEST BANK.

Constructi­on plotted for more contentiou­s areas

- LOVEDAY MORRIS AND RUTH EGLASH

JERUSALEM • Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu approved building plans for 3,736 new units in Jewish settlement­s in the occupied West Bank on Tuesday, in what activists say is part of a new wave of constructi­on spurred by the Trump administra­tion’s more accommodat­ing stance.

The units will be built in numerous settlement­s, including some of the more contentiou­s communitie­s of Hebron, Migron and Beit El, a settlement on the outskirts of the de facto Palestinia­n capital, Ramallah, said an Israeli official who discussed the announceme­nt on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly.

Some of the units, which include homes, communal buildings and institutio­ns, are slated for isolated communitie­s that sit deep inside the territory Palestinia­ns hope for a future state.

Most nations consider the settlement­s illegal. Israel disputes that.

“This year is looking to maybe even be a record year,” said Hagit Ofran, director of Settlement Watch for the leftwing Peace Now organizati­on, referring to the number of new units approved. “It’s without doubt due to the fact that there have been changes in the White House.”

President Donald Trump has said settlement­s are “not a good thing for peace,” but announceme­nts of plans to build thousands of new units since his inaugurati­on have been met with limited rebuke.

The settlement­s expanded under President Barack Obama, but his administra­tion was more vocal in its opposition, calling them “illegitima­te” and a major barrier to achieving peace and a two-state solution.

In December, Obama broke with U.S. custom by declining to veto a U.N. Security Council resolution labelling Israeli settlement­s as illegal.

Palestinia­ns say that by building settlement­s, Israel seeks to block a contiguous Palestinia­n state in the West Bank.

“Israel is bent on entrenchin­g the military occupation and its illegal settlement enterprise, further reaffirmin­g its intentions of displacing Palestine and replacing it with ‘Greater Israel,’ “said Hanan Ashrawi, a member of the executive committee of the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on.

She called on the “global community to hold Israel accountabl­e for acting outside the law before it destroys the prospects of a viable Palestinia­n state, peace and stability indefinite­ly.”

Netanyahu has repeatedly vowed this year that he will not remove a single Jewish settlement from the West Bank. “There will be no more uprooting of settlement­s in the land of Israel,” he said in a speech in August at the settlement of Barkan. “We are here to stay.”

About 400,000 Jews live in roughly 150 settlement­s in the West Bank, and an additional 200,000 Israelis live in East Jerusalem, which Palestinia­ns want to become the capital of a future state.

 ?? HAZEM BADER / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? A picture taken from the West Bank city of Hebron this past February shows a view of the Kiryat Arba Jewish settlement on the outskirts of the Palestinia­n city.
HAZEM BADER / AFP / GETTY IMAGES A picture taken from the West Bank city of Hebron this past February shows a view of the Kiryat Arba Jewish settlement on the outskirts of the Palestinia­n city.
 ??  ?? Benjamin Netanyahu
Benjamin Netanyahu

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