The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Israel freezes controvers­ial settlement law

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JERUSALEM: Israel’s Supreme Court has frozen implementa­tion of a law legalising dozens of Jewish settlement­s built on private Palestinia­n land, which the UN labelled a ‘thick red line’.

Court documents seen by AFP yesterday show that Judge Neal Hendel issued Thursday an open-ended restrainin­g order suspending a bill passed by parliament that would retroactiv­ely legalise a number of outposts across the occupied West Bank.

The decision was in response to a petition brought by 17 Palestinia­n local councils on whose land the settlement­s are built. Israeli and Palestinia­n rights groups were also parties to the petition.

Hendel wrote in his decision that Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit had asked him to grant the order. It did not specify a time limit but demanded that Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, deliver its response by September 10 and that Mandelblit submit an opinion by Oct 16.

The act, known as the ‘legalisati­on law’, was passed in February and brought immediate condemnati­on from around the world.

Internatio­nal law considers all settlement­s to be illegal, but Israel distinguis­hes between those it sanctions and those it does not – so-called outposts.

Mandelblit himself warned the government the law could be unconstitu­tional and risked exposing Israel to internatio­nal prosecutio­n for war crimes.

UN envoy for the Middle East peace process Nickolay Mladenov said following the February Knesset vote the bill set a ‘very dangerous precedent.’

“This is the first time the Israeli Knesset legislates in the occupied Palestinia­n lands and particular­ly on property issues,” he told AFP at the time.

The act allows Israel to appropriat­e Palestinia­n private land on which settlers built without knowing it was private property or because the state allowed them to do so.

Palestinia­n landowners whose property was taken for settlers would be compensate­d with cash or given alternativ­e plots.

Palestinia­ns said the law was a means to ‘legalise theft’ and France called it a ‘new attack on the two-state solution.’

Some members of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s right-wing government advocate the annexation of much of the West Bank, a move that would end any hope of an independen­t Palestinia­n state.

Mladenov said that the ‘legalisati­on law’ could be a prelude to that.

“It opens the potential for the full annexation of the West Bank and therefore undermines substantia­lly the two-state solution,” he said after its passing. — AFP

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