The Jerusalem Post

RZP’s Struck: West Bank control is pillar of our presence in gov’t

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu must uphold his coalition deal with the Religious Zionist Party granting it control of civilian life in Area C of the West Bank, the party warned as it boycotted Sunday’s government meeting.

“Netanyahu must make order here,” National Missions Minister Orit Struck told KAN News prior to the cabinet meeting.

“The basic pillar of our presence in the government is our ability to carry out our policies with respect to civilian life in Judea and Samaria [Area C of the West Bank].

“This is what we demanded. This is what we received, this what Netanyahu signed off on and this is what needs to be carried out,” Struck explained.

“What was promised us has to be carried out,” she said.

The coalition deal took two months to work out because the RZP understood that it could not receive everything it wanted, explained Struck.

There were issues it wanted but compromise­d and backed away from them, she said. But the principle that it stood firm on with respect to the negotiatio­ns and which were granted to it must be upheld, she said.

This includes total oversight with respect to settler building and enforcemen­t actions with regard to illegal Jewish and Palestinia­n buildings in Area C, she explained.

Under the coalition agreement, Smotrich was given control of the Office of the Coordinato­r of Government Activities

in the Territorie­s (COGAT), the IDF’s Civil Administra­tion division. It is a branch of that office and has enforcemen­t power in building issues in Area C of the West Bank. It also has the authority to approve constructi­on for both Israelis and Palestinia­ns.

She spoke out after Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant of his Likud party clarified that they were in charge of civilian life in Area C, when it came to the demolition of settler homes in the West Bank.

Struck told KAN that the coalition deal was very clear – it gave the RZP a ministeria­l position in the Defense Ministry, which is led by party head Bezalel Smotrich, who is also the finance minister.

Smotrich, in his position as a minister in the Defense Ministry, is tasked with control of COGAT and the Civil Administra­tion with respect

to Area C, she said.

“This division of authority is written as clearly as possible, that the minister will have full responsibi­lity over COGAT – this thing has not happened,” Struck said.

“So we are stopping here,” she said, as she explained why the party had boycotted the weekly government meeting. But she stopped short of directly threatenin­g to leave the coalition.

The matter came to a head after right-wing activists illegally built an outpost in the Samaria region of the West Bank, placing five small modular homes on the site overnight.

Smotrich ordered COGAT not to move against the outpost until he had time to discuss the matter with Gallant on Sunday.

Gallant ignored that directive and ordered the Civil Administra­tion,

together with the Border Police, to demolish the outpost. Gallant has since prevented activists from reaching the site.

Netanyahu backed Gallant stating that the law must be observed.

Struck said that the government’s priority should be the removal of all illegal Palestinia­n building in Area C of the West Bank, which she said is part of a blatant Palestinia­n Authority plan to seize control of Area C, which is now under IDF military and civilian control and is not within the sovereign boundaries of Israel.

The PA has been blunt about its belief that Area C should be part of the final borders of its state.

The RZP, in advocating for the demolition of Palestinia­n homes, does not address the inequity when it comes to the advancemen­t of building projects in Area C, which favors

Jewish ones over Palestinia­n ones.

National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir said that if Netanyahu wants to uphold building laws in Area C, then he should do it equally for Jews and Palestinia­ns.

At the government meeting, Ben-Gvir demanded the immediate evacuation of the illegal Bedouin herding village of Khan al-Ahmar which is located just below the Kfar Adumim settlement.

Right-wing politician­s and activists have sought to sway the government to dismantle that village of huts and tents since 2009. The right-wing NGO Regavim filed multiple court cases against the outpost, the latest of which was opened in 2019.

As part of the petition, the court asked the state to present to the judiciary its plan to demolish Khan al-Ahmar by February 1.

 ?? (Nasser Ishtayeh/Flash90) ?? SETTLERS TRY to rebuild the Or Haim illegal outpost, named after late religious-Zionist leader Rabbi Haim Druckman, yesterday.
(Nasser Ishtayeh/Flash90) SETTLERS TRY to rebuild the Or Haim illegal outpost, named after late religious-Zionist leader Rabbi Haim Druckman, yesterday.
 ?? (Jamal Awad/Flash90) ?? A VIEW of the Bedouin village Khan al-Ahmar yesterday.
(Jamal Awad/Flash90) A VIEW of the Bedouin village Khan al-Ahmar yesterday.

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