Gulf Today

Israel advances plans for 2,300 settlement homes

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Israel has advanced plans for more than 2,300 setlement homes in the occupied West Bank, the latest in a surge of such approvals since US President Donald Trump took office, an NGO said on Tuesday.

A defence ministry planning commitee issued the approvals while meeting over the past couple of days, the Peace Now NGO said in a statement.

The 2,304 housing units are at various stages in the approval process.

“The approval of setlement plans is part of a disastrous government policy designed to prevent the possibilit­y of peace and a two-state solution, and to annex part or all of the West Bank,” said Peace Now, which closely monitors Israeli setlement building.

Trump has also been far less critical of Israeli setlement building than former president Barack Obama’s administra­tion, and setlement approvals have sharply increased since he took office, Peace Now says.

West Bank setlement plans increased to 6,742 units in 2017 compared with 2,629 the previous year, Obama’s last in office, according to Peace Now.

Another 5,618 housing units were approved in the setlements in 2018, the NGO says.

This week’s approvals include the legalisati­on of three wildcat setlements, known as Givat Salit, Ibei Hanahal and Haroeh Haivri.

Last week, Israel’s security cabinet gave rare approval to 700 Palestinia­n homes in the part of the West Bank under the country’s full control while also approving 6,000 homes for setlers.

Details of those plans were not publicly released, and some of the 6,000 setler homes may be included in this week’s commitee approvals, said Peace Now’s Hagit Ofran.

According to Peace Now, this week’s approvals also include plans for 194 units in the Ganei Modiin setlement.

It says constructi­on for those plans would occur near Israel’s separation barrier, which cuts off the West Bank.

Israel recently demolished some 70 Palestinia­n homes -- most of which were still under constructi­on -- near the separation barrier, saying they were built illegally and were a danger to security.

Peace Now says the Ganei Modiin setlement plans were approved ater developers agreed to pay for constructi­on of a high wall for security purposes.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pledged before April elections to annex setlements in the West Bank, a move sought by the country’s far-right.

The setlement movement wields heavy influence in Israeli right-wing politics, and Netanyahu is again up for re-election in new polls on Sept.17 ater he failed to form a governing coalition following the previous vote.

Annexing setlements on a large-scale in the West Bank could prove to be a death knell for the two-state solution, long the focus of internatio­nal efforts to resolve the Israeli-palestinia­n conflict.

The plan for Palestinia­ns, though relatively small and far outweighed by the new setlement homes, could allow Netanyahu to argue he is making efforts in favour of the White House’s long-awaited peace plan.

Trump’s son-in-law and senior aide Jared Kushner visited the region, including Israel, last week to discuss the peace plan.

Kushner has said his plan will not mention a two-state solution because “it means one thing to the Israelis, it means one thing to the Palestinia­ns.”

Trump has swung US policy strongly in favour of Israel since taking office and the Palestinia­ns have already dismissed the upcoming peace plan, calling his administra­tion blatantly biased against them.

Palestinia­n leaders have boycoted the White House since Trump recognised occupied Jerusalem as Israel’s capital in 2017.

The occupied Jerusalem recognitio­n was part of a series of moves against them by Trump, including cuting hundreds of millions of dollars in aid and shuting the de facto Palestinia­n embassy in Washington.

All setlements are viewed as illegal under internatio­nal law, which Israel disputes.

It differenti­ates between setlements it has approved and those it has not, known as outposts.

It regularly grants retroactiv­e approval to outposts.

Israel began building the separation barrier during the bloody second Palestinia­n intifada and says it is for security reasons.

Palestinia­ns see it as an “apartheid wall” and a potent symbol of the occupation.

Move is part of a disastrous government policy designed to prevent the possibilit­y of peace and a two-state solution, and to annex part or all of the West Bank: Group

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? ↑ Palestinia­ns protest against Israeli imports at the Ofer Israeli checkpoint near Ramallah on Tuesday.
Agence France-presse ↑ Palestinia­ns protest against Israeli imports at the Ofer Israeli checkpoint near Ramallah on Tuesday.

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