Arab News

Anger over Israeli plan for new homes in Hebron They have been trying to Judaize the city for some time, expert tells Arab News

- DAOUD KUTTAB

AMMAN: Palestinia­ns accused Israel on Tuesday of using the Hamas-Fatah reconcilia­tion as a distractio­n while building illegal new homes in the old city of Hebron.

The Israeli Planning Commission has approved the constructi­on of 31 homes in and around Shuhada Street, an area under Israeli security control. New building in the heart of the city is banned under an IsraeliPal­estinian agreement, and this is the first such approval since 2001.

Israel intentiona­lly chose a time when Palestinia­ns are engrossed by the Hamas-Fatah reconcilia­tion and the prospect of a unity government, said Nayef Hashlamoun, director of Al-Watan, a civil society group in Hebron.

“This action is extremely dangerous and it aims at further exasperati­ng the already tense situation in the heart of the Palestinia­n city of Hebron,” he said.

Israeli settlers had worked methodical­ly to change the nature of the city, Hashlamoun said.

“They have converted Palestinia­n schools into synagogues and the bus station into a military post, and now they are destroying the ability of Palestinia­ns to regain access to Shuhada Street despite earlier agreements.”

About 800 Israeli settlers live under heavy military guard in the heart of Hebron, among about 200,000 Palestinia­ns. Peace Now, the Israeli peace advocacy group, said the Hebron settlement was “the occupation at its most ugly.”

“The permits approved today would increase the number of settlers in Hebron by 20 percent, and they required significan­t legal acrobatics that might not stand the test of the High Court of Justice, while doing everything to please a small group of settlers,” the group said.

The latest building is part of a long-held Israeli plan to make the center of Hebron more Jewish, Mohammad Aboushi, a Palestinia­n expert on settlement­s, told Arab News.

“They have been trying to Judaize the city for some time, and even though they have not added any new settlement­s in 15 years this decision will make the already tense situation in the city unbearable,” he said.

The West Bank and East Jerusalem are occupied territorie­s under internatio­nal law and all Israeli settlement-building there in illegal.

 ??  ?? Israeli soldiers detain a Palestinia­n boy during recent clashes in the West Bank city of Hebron. (Reuters)
Israeli soldiers detain a Palestinia­n boy during recent clashes in the West Bank city of Hebron. (Reuters)

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