Arab News

Billions spent on settlers since Israel captured West Bank

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JERUSALEM: Successive Israeli government­s have invested billions of dollars over the past 50 years on settlement­s in the occupied West Bank, making any withdrawal from the Palestinia­n territory a costly propositio­n.

There is no official overall figure for Israel’s spending on Jewish settlement­s since the June 1967 Six-Day War.

Each year, the Finance Ministry has published partial figures, amounting to $3.5 billion over the 12 years up to 2015, but the sum does not include investment­s before 2003.

It also does not cover the vast amounts spent on infrastruc­ture such as special roads reserved for settlers and on their security.

More than 600,000 settlers live among 2.9 million Palestinia­ns in the West Bank and annexed east Jerusalem, with frequent outbreaks of violence.

The figures also do not include the Gaza Strip which Israel also captured in 1967, but from where its army and settlers pulled out in 2005.

The settlement­s, which are deemed illegal under internatio­nal law, are widely seen as a key obstacle to peace between Israel and the Palestinia­ns. No Israeli government, however, has turned its back on the settlers.

Roby Nathanson, head of the Macro Center for Political Economics, which publishes reports on settlement­s, estimates the total costs since June 1967 as $20 billion.

The total surface area of settlement­s constructi­on in the West Bank has doubled in 18 years, according to the non-government­al organizati­on.

As a financial incentive for the expansion of settlement­s, the average settler receives three times more in public subsidies than a resident of Israel proper within its pre-1967 borders.

Shlomo Swirski of the Adva Center, another NGO, estimates that Israel spent $15.2 billion between 1988 and 2015 alone.

“This burden has contribute­d to deepening social inequality in as much as the money goes to settlement­s and their defense at the expense of social budgets,” he said.

Despite the huge sums injected into settlement­s, several activists favorable to the creation of an independen­t Palestinia­n state argue that settlement­s are not irreversib­le.

The Israeli economy has the means to finance the resettleme­nt inside the country of 100,000 Jews, according to Gilad Sher, a former close aide to exPrime Minister Ehud Barak, estimating the cost at $10 billion.

Sher, a founder of Blue-White Future which advocates “the Jewish and democratic future of Israel,” was referring to the number of residents of isolated West Bank settlement­s which are considered the most likely to be evacuated under any two-state peace settlement with the Palestinia­ns.

The political consensus in Israel favors annexation of the large settlement blocs which are home to 300,000 Jews.

“We have drawn up a detailed and credible plan on the removal of 100,000 settlers” because the government has refused to do so despite an official recommenda­tion dating back to 2010, said Sher.

“Our conclusion­s are clear: The situation is by no means irreversib­le. Economic options exist for the implementa­tion of a solution of two states for two peoples.”

Nathanson said it was “perfectly possible” to envisage a withdrawal of 100,000 settlers in phases over a period of two to three years.

 ??  ?? A woman mourns during the funeral of Nawaf Infiaat, a 16-year-old Palestinia­n girl, who was killed by Israeli soldiers, in the northern West Bank town of Yaabad on Saturday. (AFP)
A woman mourns during the funeral of Nawaf Infiaat, a 16-year-old Palestinia­n girl, who was killed by Israeli soldiers, in the northern West Bank town of Yaabad on Saturday. (AFP)

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