Muscat Daily

Israel invites bids for 2,500 new settler homes

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Jerusalem - Israel has invited tenders for 2,500 new settler homes in annexed east Jerusalem and the occupied West Bank, a watchdog said on Wednesday.

On Sunday, Israel approved 780 new settler homes in the West Bank ahead of a March general election in which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is expected to face a fierce challenge from the right from prosettler candidate Gideon Saar.

Peace Now said the government had now invited tenders for a further 2,112 units in the West Bank and 460 in east Jerusalem, which the Palestinia­ns hope to make the capital of a future state.

It accused the government of a ‘mad scramble to promote as much settlement activity as possible until the last minutes before the change of the administra­tion in Washington’.

‘By doing so, Netanyahu is signalling to the incoming president that he has no intention of giving the new chapter in US-Israel relations even one day of grace, nor serious thought to how to plausibly resolve our conflict with the Palestinia­ns,’ Peace Now said in a statement.

For the Palestinia­ns, Nabil Abu Rudeina, a spokesman for President Mahmud Abbas, said the Israeli move was equivalent to a ‘race to eliminate what remains of the two-state solution, while posing more and more obstacles to the new US administra­tion’.

All Jewish settlement­s in the

West Bank are regarded as illegal by much of the internatio­nal community.

But Trump’s administra­tion, breaking with decades of US policy, declared in late 2019 that Washington no longer considered settlement­s as being in breach of internatio­nal law.

Biden has indicated that his administra­tion will restore Washington’s pre-Trump policy of opposing settlement expansion.

But on Tuesday his nominee for secretary of state, said the incoming administra­tion will not reverse Trump’s recognitio­n of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

“The only way to ensure Israel’s future as a Jewish, democratic state and to give the Palestinia­ns a state to which they are entitled is through the so-called two-state solution,” Antony Blinken said.

Electionee­ring

Beyond the change in Washington, experts say Netanyahu also has domestic political reasons for pushing settlement expansion.

Electionee­ring is intensifyi­ng ahead of Israel’s March 23 vote, in which the country's longestser­ving premier faces a new challenge from Saar, a prominent pro-settler voice who split with Netanyahu’s rightwing Likud party late last year.

Israel has occupied the West Bank since the Six-Day War of 1967 and has increasing­ly expanded the size and number of its settlement­s there, particular­ly under Netanyahu's leadership since 2009.

There are currently some 650,000 Jews living in east Jerusalem and the West Bank amid an estimated 3.1mn Palestinia­ns.

Government­s around the world see the settlement­s as one of the biggest obstacles to a twostate solution to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict.

 ?? (AFP) ?? This file photo shows new houses under constructi­on in the Nokdim settlement in the Israeli occupied West Bank, on October 13 last year
(AFP) This file photo shows new houses under constructi­on in the Nokdim settlement in the Israeli occupied West Bank, on October 13 last year

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