Santa Fe New Mexican

Outpost approvals raise tensions

- By Isabel Debre

GIVAT HAREL, West Bank — One day in the fall of 1998, Shivi Drori, a young farmer fresh out of the Israeli army, brought three trailers to a rugged hilltop deep in the occupied West Bank and began to plant raspberrie­s.

It was an unauthoriz­ed settlement in the heart of territory claimed by the Palestinia­ns, but Drori, now 49, said he considered himself to be “in a way, working with the government.”

Today, more than 90 Jewish families live in what has become the thriving village of Givat Harel — full of concrete homes with breathtaki­ng views, a crowded nursery and an award-winning vineyard.

Just down the road is Turmus Aya, a Palestinia­n village that lost part of its land to the nearby Shilo settlement two decades ago. One of the villagers, Amal Abu Awad, 58, has watched her world shrink since the settlers arrived.

She said settlers prevented her late husband from reaching his grazing land and periodical­ly uprooted her olive trees. Last week, masked vandals attacked her house, armed with clubs and knives, shouting insults as they smashed windows and broke her solar panels.

Her seven sons now take turns perching on the roof overnight, watching out for vigilantes.

“This was our land long before they thought to claim it,” she said.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s new far-right government announced last week it would legalize Givat Harel, along with nine other unauthoriz­ed West Bank outposts, boosting settlers’ morale and strengthen­ing their hold on the land.

Drori’s village, on a ridge between the Palestinia­n cities of Ramallah and Nablus, is part of an extensive network of 150 outposts now home to some 20,000 settlers, according to anti-settlement watchdog Peace Now. The outposts appeared over the past three decades, many built at least partially on private Palestinia­n land, Peace Now says.

While the outposts were establishe­d without formal government authorizat­ion, they often received tacit government support or even public funding. Over 20% of the outposts, like Givat Harel, have been retroactiv­ely legalized, and more are in the pipeline.

Anti-settlement groups and experts describe a steady government effort to entrench Israeli rule over the West Bank and grab more occupied land that Palestinia­ns seek for a future state. Strings of strategica­lly located outposts have changed the landscape of the territory — threatenin­g to make a future Palestinia­n state little more than a shriveled constellat­ion of disconnect­ed enclaves.

“We see this as a very big move toward annexation,” said Ziv Stahl, director of Israeli rights group Yesh Din. “Cementing the existence of these places blocks any hope for Palestinia­ns to ever get their land back.”

On Monday, days after the government’s outpost approvals triggered widespread condemnati­on, Netanyahu declared a six-month freeze in recognizin­g new outposts — part of a U.S.-brokered agreement to avert a diplomatic crisis at the United Nations.

As a result, the U.N. Security Council approved a watereddow­n statement opposing Israel’s expansion of settlement­s, derailing a legally binding resolution that would have demanded a halt to Israeli settlement activity.

But Netanyahu made no public commitment to halt settlement constructi­on. On Thursday, his government granted approval for over 7,000 new homes in Jewish settlement­s across the West Bank. Some of those homes, settlement opponents said, are located in four outposts that remain unauthoriz­ed.

Netanyahu’s freeze “is meaningles­s,” said Lior Amihai from Peace Now.

 ?? SAM MCNEIL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A recent view of the West Bank Jewish outpost of Givat Harel. It’s among 10 West Bank settlement­s Israel’s new ultranatio­nalist government said last week it would legalize.
SAM MCNEIL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A recent view of the West Bank Jewish outpost of Givat Harel. It’s among 10 West Bank settlement­s Israel’s new ultranatio­nalist government said last week it would legalize.

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