The Jerusalem Post

Peace Now and settler leader: Constructi­on permits, investment in settlement­s dramatical­ly up

Increased settlement activity comes as Jordan Valley launches political campaign to get Blue and White Party to join effort to annex West Bank region

- • By JEREMY SHARON

Building permits in settlement­s in the Samaria district have increased by 50% over the past five years, the head of the Samaria Regional Council Yossi Dagan said on Wednesday.

His comments, made at the Eilat Real Estate Conference, corroborat­e the recent trend of dramatic increases in the approval of settlement housing constructi­on plans in the West Bank settlement­s in general, according to Peace Now.

And while constructi­on planning is increasing, the discretion­ary funds the government is investing in the settlement­s have also increased significan­tly in recent years. The annual average for such spending over the past two years is approximat­ely 50% higher than the average over the past 15 years.

At the same time, the Jordan Valley Regional Council has launched a political campaign to get the Blue and White Party to join the effort to annex the West Bank region.

This heightened settlement activity is thought to be connected to the much softer stance the Trump administra­tion has taken toward the issue, a policy that was underlined last month when the US reversed a previous policy stance to determine that Israel’s West Bank settlement­s are not illegal.

“One of the clear signs of the change that is happening in Judea and Samaria, and the understand­ing of more and more investors that Samaria is not the next thing but is the thing, is that the number of building permits has gone up significan­tly in recent years,” said Dagan, noting the 50% increase over the last five years.

According to Peace Now, the number of plans for housing units in Judea and Samaria as a whole that have received initial or final approval since the beginning of the Trump administra­tion has risen threefold over the figures for the latter years of the Obama administra­tion.

The average number of housing units approved per year in the three years since Trump was elected is some 6,899 housing units, almost twice the average of some 3,635 units in the three years preceding him.

In addition, Peace Now issued a report on Tuesday demonstrat­ing that discretion­ary spending by the government in the settlement­s has increased by 50% in the last two years.

Included in this spending is expenditur­e by various ministries outside of the general budget, including from the Interior, Housing, Education, and Energy and Water ministries, as well as Netivei Israel – National Transport Infrastruc­ture Company Ltd.

These funds go toward housing unit constructi­on, as well as for internal roads, buildings for educationa­l, social and religious purposes, commercial centers and industrial parks.

Along with the increased planning approval for new housing units and the increased government investment in the settlement­s are greater political demands for annexing portions of the West Bank, calls which increased on Wednesday.

David Elhayani, head of the Jordan Valley Regional Council, said that recent developmen­ts of a “tectonic shift” in opinion toward the settlement­s, including the US policy that the settlement­s are not illegal, are an “opportunit­y not to be missed,” and announced a public advocacy campaign for the annexation of the Jordan Valley region.

The campaign appears to be spawned by the current political paralysis, with Elhayani saying that “local politics must not be allowed to harm the window of opportunit­y that we have received,” adding said that time is running out.

Elhayani pointed specifical­ly to the Blue and White Party as “the last obstacle” for the applicatio­n of Israeli sovereignt­y over the Jordan Valley, and said that he expects party leader Benny Gantz to “show leadership” and assist in this endeavor.

During the September election campaign, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu promised to apply Israeli sovereignt­y to the Jordan Valley, while Blue and White leader Benny Gantz said the Jordan Valley would always remain under Israeli control.

A Blue and White official did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the new campaign.

 ?? (Menahem Kahana/Reuters) ?? PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu meets heads of regional councils in Alon Shvut, Gush Etzion, last month.
(Menahem Kahana/Reuters) PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu meets heads of regional councils in Alon Shvut, Gush Etzion, last month.

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