The Jerusalem Post

Yesh Din: Bleak outlook with new law

- • By YONAH JEREMY BOB

With the ink on the settlement­s law just starting to dry, the left-wing NGO Yesh Din said on Tuesday that the state was seeking a sea change in policy, potentiall­y asking the High Court of Justice to legalize unauthoriz­ed Jewish outposts on private Palestinia­n property retroactiv­ely and to strike related house demolition orders.

The specific unauthoriz­ed outpost in question is Adei Ad, built in 1998 near Shiloh.

The outpost was partially built on private Palestinia­n land belonging to residents of the villages of Turmus Aiya, Almagor, Qaryut, and Jalud.

In 2014, Yesh Din petitioned the High Court on behalf of those Palestinia­n villages demanding the court order the state to remove the outpost, both because it was built on private Palestinia­n land and claiming it is a hub for criminal and systematic violent activity against Palestinia­ns.

By September 2015, the state had agreed that the outpost was unauthoriz­ed, but said it would legalize those portions of the outpost which were built on state land and only remove portions of the outpost on private Palestinia­n land.

But the state’s latest update of its position filed to the High Court on Monday, is the first since last Tuesday when the settlement­s law was passed.

The law empowered various state organs to legalize a range of unauthoriz­ed Jewish settlement­s on private Palestinia­n land, while providing compensati­on.

Yesh Din said that the big change was the state seeking to reevaluate whether the settlement­s law could allow it to legalize even some of the Adei Ad Jewish settlement­s on private Palestinia­n land which it had previously been prepared to demolish.

The NGO also said that the state had claimed after it completed a new survey that half of those residences which were on private Palestinia­n land are, in fact, on state land.

It added that in recent weeks it had documented three new incidents of Adei Ad settlers allegedly attacking nearby Palestinia­ns.

Meanwhile, Adalah said on Tuesday that the High Court had ordered the state to initially respond to Adalah’s petition to strike the settlement­s law as unconstitu­tional by March 8.

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