The Jerusalem Post

In challenge to Biden, Israel plans to advance Har Homa project

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

Israel plans to advance a 540-unit extension to the contentiou­s east Jerusalem Jewish neighborho­od of Har Homa in its first direct challenge to the Biden administra­tion on Jerusalem.

On Wednesday, the Local Planning Committee is set to discuss the Har Homa project, along with 26 other projects located on both sides of the Green Line in Jerusalem. It includes building projects for Arab neighborho­ods.

“The planned discussion­s on objections to the Har Homa plan is the second-to-last stage in the plan’s approval process,” the left-wing group Ir Amim said Monday.

“Such a measure constitute­s the first advancemen­t of a settlement plan beyond the Green Line in Jerusalem since US President [Joe] Biden entered office, and should be seen as an Israeli-initiated challenge to the new American administra­tion with the intent of probing US reaction,” it stated.

“The convening of this discussion indicates that despite the change in the US administra­tion, Israel intends to continue to advance settlement constructi­on in some of the most politicall­y strategic locations in east Jerusalem and its vicinity” of greater Jerusalem, Ir Amim said.

Jerusalem Deputy Mayor Fleur Hassan-Nahoum accused Ir Amim of creating a mountain out of a molehill by transformi­ng the city’s normative planning process into a diplomatic battlegrou­nd.

In particular, a number of the 27 projects that would be under debate were for constructi­on in Arab east Jerusalem neighborho­od, she said.

“There is no drama here,” Hassan-Nahoum said, adding that the planning process had begun five years earlier and

that the homes were already part of the Har Homa master plan.

The project provides the city with new homes to accommodat­e for natural growth of its residents, she said. All that is happening here is that “the city is taking care of its residents,” she added.

Ir Amim said the project was outside the built-up area of Har Homa and unofficial­ly constitute­d a new neighborho­od “in the open space between Har Homa and Givat

Hamatos.”

“It will complete Israeli territoria­l contiguity along the southern perimeter and sever east Jerusalem from Bethlehem and the southern West Bank,” it said.

Israel has supported Jewish building throughout Jerusalem, which it considers to be its united and undivided capital. The internatio­nal community has opposed such building in east Jerusalem, which it maintains is the future capital of a Palestinia­n state.

But it has been particular­ly concerned by the area on the southern edge of the city, near the Palestinia­n city of Bethlehem, where Ha Homa is located.

Ir Amim has contended that Har Homa, as well as the planned building for the new Jewish Givat Hamatos neighborho­od nearby, severs Palestinia­n east Jerusalem neighborho­ods from Bethlehem and thus harms the possibilit­y of a contiguous Palestinia­n state.

Since taking office in January, Biden has been clear about his opposition to Jewish building over the pre-1967 lines, including in West Bank settlement­s.

Last week, US State Department spokesman Ned Price said: “We believe when it comes to settlement activity that Israel should refrain from unilateral steps that exacerbate tensions and that undercut efforts to advance a negotiated two-state solution.”

Still, the Biden administra­tion’s position on Jerusalem has been less clear than its stance on West Bank settlement­s. It has upheld the declaratio­n by the Trump administra­tion that Jerusalem is Israel’s capital, and it also has not rescinded the decision to allow Americans born anywhere in the city to register their place of birth as Israel, something that had previously been forbidden.

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? IR AMIM says the project was outside the built-up area of Har Homa and unofficial­ly constitute­d a new neighborho­od.
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) IR AMIM says the project was outside the built-up area of Har Homa and unofficial­ly constitute­d a new neighborho­od.

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