The Pak Banker

Israel builds new road as govt weighs West Bank annexation

- JERUSALEM -AFP

Constructi­on is under way on a major new ring road for Jerusalem that Israeli officials say will benefit all of its residents, but critics of the project say is another obstacle to Palestinia­n hopes to make East Jerusalem the capital of a future state.

The bypass, called The American Road, will connect Jewish settlement­s in the occupied West Bank that are north and south of Jerusalem. The central and southern sections of the road are already being built, and tenders for the northernmo­st stretch - at a projected cost of $187 million - will be issued toward the end of the year, a Jerusalem municipali­ty official told Reuters on condition of anonymity.

In total, the project, which will run along or near the outer rim of East Jerusalem, is forecast to cost more than a quarter of a billion dollars. Israel annexed East Jerusalem, in a move that has not won internatio­nal recognitio­n, after capturing the area, along with the West Bank and Gaza Strip, in a 1967 war.

The constructi­on comes as the Israeli government is set to begin cabinet-level discussion­s from July 1 about implementi­ng Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's election promise to annex Jewish settlement­s in the West Bank -a planned step that is sparking growing internatio­nal criticism. Peace negotiatio­ns between Israel and the Palestinia­ns broke down in 2014.

Israeli officials say the road, which will include a 1.6 kilometre (one mile) tunnel east of the Mount of Olives, will ease traffic congestion for both Israelis and Palestinia­ns living in the area.

"It doesn't unite the settlement­s. It's not about uniting borders or municipal lines," said Arieh King, a Deputy Mayor of Jerusalem and a leading figure in the city's settler movement. "But it does connect them more on the daily level - whether it's studies, tourism or commerce. And then in practice you create a huge Jerusalem metropolis."

Palestinia­ns say the new road will primarily benefit settlers, and will further undermine the feasibilit­y of East Jerusalem as the capital of the state they seek in the West Bank and Gaza.

"This project cuts off Palestinia­n neighborho­ods within the city from one another," Fadi AlHidmi, the Palestinia­n Minister of Jerusalem Affairs, said via email. Responding to questions from Reuters, Al-Hidmi said The American Road was part of Israel's "illegal" ring road project, which "surrounds occupied East Jerusalem to further connect Israeli settlement­s and sever the occupied Palestinia­n capital from the rest of the West Bank."

Israel's West Bank settlement­s were built by successive government­s on land captured in the 1967 war. More than 400,000 Israelis now live there, with another 200,000 in East Jerusalem. Palestinia­ns say the settlement­s make a future state unviable, and most of the world views them as illegal under internatio­nal law. Israel disputes this, citing its security needs and biblical and historical ties to the land on which they are built.

King said the highway would be a "significan­t corridor" from the Gush Etzion settlement bloc in the southern West Bank and settlement­s such as Har Homa south of the city centre, to settlement­s to the north and east of Jerusalem, including Maale Adumim, which is home to more than 40,000 people.

Arab residents in East Jerusalem neighbourh­oods such as Umm Tuba and Sur Baher would also benefit, he said, because it would reduce their travel times.

Israel's transport ministry directed questions to the Jerusalem municipali­ty. Daniel Seidemann, an Israeli attorney who represente­d some Palestinia­n families affected by the constructi­on, told Reuters the bypass fitted into a long-time strategy by Israel of using infrastruc­ture projects to secure "de facto annexation" of territory.

"What we are seeing here is, again, the seamless integratio­n of the northern West Bank, East Jerusalem under sole Israeli control, and the southern West Bank for the purposes of the settlers," said Seidemann, who specialise­s in the geopolitic­s of Jerusalem.

 ?? MILAN
- AFP ?? A woman in a face mask is seen in front of the Italian Stock Exchange in Milan, as the country is hit by the coronaviru­s outbreak.
MILAN - AFP A woman in a face mask is seen in front of the Italian Stock Exchange in Milan, as the country is hit by the coronaviru­s outbreak.

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