The Jerusalem Post

Bill would rebuild 4 Samaria settlement­s

Communitie­s demolished in 2005

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

Two right-wing lawmakers submitted a bill on Tuesday that would open the door for settlers to rebuild four Samaria communitie­s that were demolished by the government during the 2005 disengagem­ent program, most of which involved the Gaza Strip.

“The Israeli public understand­s in a painful way that the disengagem­ent was a mistake,” said MK Shuli Mualem-Refaeli (Bayit Yehudi) who filed the bill along with coalition chairman MK David Biton (Likud).

It’s the second bill regarding Area C of the West Bank that rightwing lawmakers have attempted to advance since US President Donald Trump was sworn into office on Friday. Lawmakers have also tried to move forward on a bill to annex Ma’aleh Adumim.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has cautioned MKs not to take dramatic steps until after he meets with Trump in February. The legislatio­n must be approved by three plenum votes.

In 2005 Israel withdrew from the Gaza Strip after demolishin­g 21 settlement­s there. It also leveled four settlement­s in northern Samaria – Homesh, San-Nur, Ganim and Kadim – but maintained military control over that territory. The area is considered a closed military zone and Israeli citizens cannot access it.

Lawmakers now want to rescind that order so that Israelis can enter that area, as a prelude to eventually rebuilding the settlement­s.

“There was no justificat­ion to sacrifice those communitie­s and there is no justificat­ion to continue to prevent Jews from being part of that area,” said Mualem-Refaeli. “In the future we will be able to rebuild those communitie­s so the residents can return home.”

Samaria Regional Council head Yossi Dagan, who was evacuated from Sa-Nur, said, “We have waited 11 years from this moment and every additional minute is unnecessar­y. The time has come to rescind the disengagem­ent law everywhere, and certainly in northern Samaria.”

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