The Jerusalem Post

Rivlin: Knesset will legalize Migron if gov’t doesn’t

- • By LAHAV HARKOV

If the government does not legalize Migron, then the legislatur­e will, Knesset Speaker Reuven Rivlin said during a visit to the outpost on Thursday.

He spoke a day after Habayit Hayehudi threatened to leave the coalition because the government has yet to make a final decision on the issue.

Rivlin called on the government to take responsibi­lity for the current situation, in which the High Court of Justice ordered homes demolished by the end of March, because they were built on private Palestinia­n land.

The government must legalize the homes in question, and could reimburse the Palestinia­ns in question if they proved ownership, he said.

“The [Migron] residents here are not thieves and are

not trying to banish people from their land. They came here innocently, with the encouragem­ent of the State of Israel,” Rivlin said.

In addition, he said there was no reason to demolish the houses and rebuild them in another part of Migron. According to the Knesset speaker, that would mean the state was admitting it did an injustice and allowed land to be stolen, which it did not do.

Rivlin does not oppose the court’s decision. Rather, he said, the government should find a legal way to change the land’s status, either through legislatio­n or a government decision.

Numerous bills that would legalize outposts and save outpost homes have been proposed in recent months.

These bills have all been rejected by the Ministeria­l Committee on Legislatio­n, so that the government can negotiate with homeowners and find a solution other than new laws.

However, these negotiatio­ns are not sufficient for Habayit Hayehudi. The party threatened to leave the coalition on Wednesday after Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu announced that he was freezing the scheduled Ministeria­l Committee vote on a bill to legalize certain outposts sponsored by MKS Zevulun Orlev (Habayit Hayehudi) and Ya’acov Katz (National Union).

If Migron is demolished, Habayit Hayehudi plans to immediatel­y leave the coalition, Ze’ev Kam of Makor Rishon reported on Wednesday night.

Orlev and Katz’s bill was voted down by the Ministeria­l Committee on Legislatio­n in December, but Public Diplomacy and Diaspora Affairs Minister Yuli Edelstein (Likud) appealed the rejection. Netanyahu told Edelstein that he would not allow the ministers to vote on the bill again on Sunday, as planned, so that negotiatio­ns could continue between the settlers and Ministerwi­thout-portfolio Bennie Begin.

According to Makor Rishon, Migron residents said they would negotiate with Begin even if the legislatio­n passed. •

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