Dayton Daily News

Israel OKs West Bank Palestinia­n housing

- By Ilan Ben Zion

JERUSALEM — The Israeli Cabinet unanimousl­y approved a proposal to build over 700 housing units for Palestinia­ns in addition to 6,000 Israeli settlement housing units in the West Bank.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government advanced the proposal late Tuesday, according to an Israeli official who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the closed-door meeting.

A spokesman for Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas responded to the developmen­t by saying that the Palestinia­ns don’t need Israeli permits to build on land that Israel occupied.

The approval appeared timed to coincide with a visit by President Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, who is also the White House’s chief Mideast envoy.

Kushner kicked off a new regional tour in Jordan on Wednesday to promote the Trump administra­tion’s call for a $50 billion economic support plan for the Palestinia­ns. The funds would accompany a Mideast peace proposal, which the administra­tion has yet to release. He later flew to Israel and was expected to meet with Netanyahu later in the evening.

The Israeli permits are for constructi­on in what is known as Area C — the roughly 60% of the West Bank where Israel exercises full control and where most Jewish settlement­s are located. Netanyahu’s government has approved the constructi­on of tens of thousands of settler homes there, but permits for Palestinia­n constructi­on are extremely rare.

Israeli officials declined to provide specifics to The Associated Press about what exactly the 700 approved Palestinia­n units entailed.

Israel captured the West Bank, along with east Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip, in the 1967 Mideast war. The Palestinia­ns seek these areas as parts of a future state. Most of the internatio­nal community considers Israeli settlement­s in the West Bank illegal under internatio­nal law and an impediment to a twostate solution to the conflict.

Nabil Abu Rudeineh, Abbas’ spokesman, said the Palestinia­ns have the right to build on all territory occupied in 1967, “without needing a permit from anyone” — referring to Israel.

“We will not give any legitimacy to the constructi­on of any settlement,” he also said.

The Western-backed Palestinia­n Authority has control of civilian affairs in Areas A and B, which include the West Bank’s main Palestinia­n cities and towns.

Since capturing the West Bank and east Jerusalem in 1967, Israel has settled some 700,000 of its citizens in the two areas, which are considered occupied territory by most of the world.

Touring new constructi­on in the West Bank settlement of Efrat, south of Jerusalem, Netanyahu said Wednesday that “not a single settlement or a single settler will ever be uprooted.”

Transporta­tion Minister Bezalel Smotrich, a religious nationalis­t in Netanyahu’s government, wrote on Facebook that he backed the constructi­on of Palestinia­n housing in Area C because “it prevents the establishm­ent of a terrorist Arab state in the heart of the land” and asserts Israeli sovereignt­y over Area C.

Peace Now, an Israeli organizati­on opposed to West Bank settlement­s, said in a statement that the approval of 700 housing units for Palestinia­ns “is a mockery” because it “will not provide real answers to Palestinia­ns who already live in Area C, and certainly will not help the entire West Bank to be developed as a Palestinia­n area.”

Meanwhile, Kushner met with King Abdullah II on Wednesday in Amman, Jordan. The royal court issued a statement saying the king restated the need for the creation of a Palestinia­n state based on the 1967 lines, with east Jerusalem as its capital.

The Palestinia­ns have rejected the Washington proposal out of hand and have cut off all contact with the Trump administra­tion, saying its policies are unfairly biased toward Israel.

Trump’s Mideast team is spearheade­d by people with close ties to Israel’s settler movement. The U.S. ambassador to Israel, David Friedman, recently told the New York Times that Israel has the “right” to annex some of the West Bank.

Both critics and supporters of the settlement­s say the White House’s friendly attitude has encouraged a jump in settlement activity.

 ?? ODED BALILTY / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Palestinia­n laborers work at a constructi­on site in the Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim, near Jerusalem, in 2017. The Israeli Cabinet on Wednesday unanimousl­y approved a proposal to build over 700 housing units for Palestinia­ns in addition to 6,000 Israeli settlement housing units in the West Bank.
ODED BALILTY / ASSOCIATED PRESS Palestinia­n laborers work at a constructi­on site in the Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim, near Jerusalem, in 2017. The Israeli Cabinet on Wednesday unanimousl­y approved a proposal to build over 700 housing units for Palestinia­ns in addition to 6,000 Israeli settlement housing units in the West Bank.

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