The Jerusalem Post

Plan to okay 1,048 homes on private Palestinia­n land frozen

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

A Civil Administra­tion plan that could authorize 1,048 settler homes built on private Palestinia­n property has been frozen for three years awaiting a response from the Justice Ministry.

A note to that effect was tacked at the bottom of a Civil Administra­tion report, published this week as an annex to the 159-page government­al response to the High Court of Justice petition regarding the Settlement­s Regulation Law.

The High Court has persistent­ly upheld the state’s position in the past that constructi­ons on private Palestinia­n property must be removed.

These homes, however, were initially thought to be on state land and were part of approved projects for West Bank settlement­s.

The Civil Administra­tion has been in the midst of a land survey effort with advanced technology to correct errors made in past studies, differenti­ating between state land and private Palestinia­n property.

As part of those surveys, it discovered that an issue existed with 1,048 structures in West Bank settlement­s. Some 303 of those structures are in the West Bank’s largest Jewish city of Modi’in Illit, which is home to more than 60,000 people.

In total, the Civil Administra­tion has studied 294 locations in the West Bank, completing the mapping of 254 places and working on an additional 40.

A Justice Ministry representa­tive said in response that the plan was drawn up before the time that Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit took office in 2016.

The plan has since been submitted to the Justice Ministry and the staff that works on the regulation of settlement homes. “We’re awaiting an opinion,” the representa­tive said.

The rest of the Civil Administra­tion document provided a rare glimpse into the IDF’s database on unauthoriz­ed settler constructi­on on private Palestinia­n property.

Peace Now has estimated that there are some 4,000 such homes. The Civil Administra­tion placed the number at 3,455 and included public institutio­ns such as schools and synagogues.

Out of those 45%, 1,576 structures, are built on private Palestinia­n property with registered owners.

Until 1998, the document stated, there was no policy of enforcemen­t against illegal settler building.

Before that time, 1,122 buildings on private Palestinia­n property were built in eight settlement­s.

The community with the largest number of such structures was Ofra, with 480 buildings. The other seven settlement­s with private Palestinia­n constructi­on were Beit El with 193 structures, Eilon Moreh with 146, Eli with 89, Ma’aleh Michmash with 70, Psagot with 58, Shavei Shomron with 46 and Hermesh with 40.

No enforcemen­t action has been taken against these home.

Additional­ly, there are 1,285 structures built in the last 20 years on private Palestinia­n property outside of the boundaries of the settlement­s, out of which 874 are in outposts and the remaining 411 are near the settlement­s.

Some 543 of these structures are on private Palestinia­n property with known owners.

According to the Civil Administra­tion, 536 homes on private Palestinia­n property were built in after the year 2006, and 749 were built in the 12 years before that.

 ?? (Amir Cohen/Reuters) ?? BUILDINGS UNDER CONSTRUCTI­ON as seen in Modi’in Illit, northwest of Jerusalem, in March.
(Amir Cohen/Reuters) BUILDINGS UNDER CONSTRUCTI­ON as seen in Modi’in Illit, northwest of Jerusalem, in March.

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