Oman Daily Observer

Israel invites bids for 2,500 new settler homes

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TEL AVIV: Israel has invited tenders for 2,500 new settler homes in annexed east Jerusalem and the occupied West Bank, a watchdog said on Wednesday, hours before Joe Biden’s swearingin as US president.

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 pro-settler 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 USIsrael 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,

Biden has indicated that he will restore Washington’s preTrump policy of opposing settlement expansion

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.

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 right-wing 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.

 ?? — AFP ?? A partial view of the Palestinia­n refugee camp of Shuafat in east Jerusalem where tens of thousands Palestinia­ns live enclosed by the Israeli controvers­ial separation.
— AFP A partial view of the Palestinia­n refugee camp of Shuafat in east Jerusalem where tens of thousands Palestinia­ns live enclosed by the Israeli controvers­ial separation.

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