The Jerusalem Post

Netanyahu promises sovereignt­y over Hebron’s Tomb of the Patriarchs

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF Hagay Hacohen contribute­d to this report.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu promised to apply Israeli sovereignt­y to the Tomb of the Patriarchs and to the Jewish community of Hebron, during a visit to the nearby West Bank Kiryat Arba settlement on Sunday.

“We will apply Israeli sovereignt­y over Kiryat Arba and the Jewish community in Hebron, including the Tomb of the patriarchs and the roads that lead to it,” Netanyahu said.

“Only we [the Likud] can do this,” the prime minister said as he stood in a white tent set up to celebrate the inaugurati­on of a new neighborho­od in Kiryat Arba called Nofei Cramim with 210 homes. The housing project was done by the Kiryat Arba-Hebron Economic Company, whose director-general is Alon Yunyan.

All West Bank settlement­s are slated to become part of sovereign Israel under US President Donald Trump’s peace plan, but according to the map, the status of Jewish Hebron and the Tomb is unclear.

Netanyahu’s statement about sovereignt­y over the Tomb of the Patriarchs

and Jewish Hebron is the clearest statement he has made to date on the matter. During the last election campaign he visited Hebron and delivered a speech in front of the Tomb without once mentioning the word sovereignt­y.

The US has asked Israel to hold off on the applicatio­n of sovereignt­y to West Bank settlement­s, something which is permissibl­e under the Trump peace plan, until after a joint US-Israel committee has completed a detailed map of the territory that could be annexed.

That mapping process “begins this week with a meeting of the joint US-Israeli committee.”

The campaign stop, made just eight days before the March 2nd election, was designed to show right-wing voters that only the Likud could make their wish list come true, particular­ly the applicatio­n of sovereignt­y over the settlement­s.

Netanyahu also made additional pledges. He said he was authorizin­g the constructi­on of an elevator to the Tomb of the Patriarchs so that it could be wheel-chair accessible. Earlier at the same event in Kiryat Arba Defense

Minister Naftali Bennett said the project was ready to go and just needed Netanyahu’s approval.

“It’s a humanitari­an act and an act of sovereignt­y,” Netanyahu said.

He also promised to build another new neighborho­od in Kiryat Arba and promised thousands of additional new homes in Judea and Samaria.

The prime minister also repeated the pledge he made last week to expand the east Jerusalem neighborho­od of Har Homa by 2,200 new units and to create a new neighborho­od of 4,000 homes on the nearby Givat Hamatos. Some 1,000 of these homes would be for Arab residents of the city and 3,000 of those homes would be for Jewish resident.

In Kiryat Arba Netanyahu promised to issue tenders for 1,000 units of the Givat Hamatos project, the presumptio­n being that these would be for Jewish homes.

Pounding on the podium and raising his voice, Netanyahu said that those who want a right-wing government must vote Likud, and only a large Likud can secure sovereignt­y.

“Who built Har Homa?,” Netanyahu asked referencin­g the fact that he was the one that created the neighborho­od in 1997. “It was empty and now it is like a small city in Israel,” Netanyahu said.

If the Likud Party is not elected then the opportunit­y to apply sovereignt­y given to Israel by the “Deal of the Century” will be lost, Netanyahu said.

Prior to Netanyahu’s speech, Bennett also spoke of the importance of sovereignt­y over the Tomb of the Patriarchs, noting that a Jewish state without that biblical site, is like Washington without the Lincoln Memorial.

Unlike Netanyahu, Bennett was critical of the portion of the Trump plan that calls for the creation of a Palestinia­n state, albeit a demilitari­zed one.

The defense minister noted that “the plan speaks 159 times of a Palestinia­n state and references Israeli sovereignt­y” only 13 times.

“I strongly oppose the giving of even one inch of land to the Arabs,” Bennett said.

After visiting Kiryat Arba, Netanyahu stopped with his wife to visit the Tomb of the Patriarchs where they lit candles.

In addition to his Kiryat Arba and Hebron visit, Netanyahu also allowed for 12 unauthoriz­ed outposts to be connected to the electricit­y grid, a move that is seen as a step toward legalizati­on.

Meanwhile, Netanyahu tweeted on Sunday that he decided to expunge the criminal records of tens of thousands of Israelis who used cannabis.

“[Justice] Minister [Amir] Ohana began work on the issue and will lead a committee which will include [medical and legal] profession­als… to examine introducin­g the Canadian model to regulate a legal [cannabis] market in Israel.”

Blue and White leader Benny Gantz responded that Netanyahu had been “selling illusions” for years to those who need medical cannabis. Blue and White MK Yair Lapid responded to the news saying he supports legalizati­on, but what Netanyahu did not do in his 14 years in office he will never get done.

 ?? (Ronen Zvulun/Reuters) ?? PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu receives a gift during an event inaugurati­ng a new neighborho­od in Kiryat Arba yesterday.
(Ronen Zvulun/Reuters) PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu receives a gift during an event inaugurati­ng a new neighborho­od in Kiryat Arba yesterday.

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