Kuwait Times

Israel plans new Hebron settlement

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JERUSALEM: Israel’s defense minister announced plans to build a new Jewish-only settlement in the heart of a flashpoint West Bank city yesterday, weeks after the United States said it no longer considered such communitie­s illegal. The move in Hebron in the southern West Bank sparked Palestinia­n anger and accusation­s that US President Donald Trump effectivel­y greenlight­ed the move.

Rightwing Defense Minister Naftali Bennett said the new developmen­t would double the Jewish population in the city, where around 800 settlers live guarded by hundreds of Israeli soldiers, surrounded by some 200,000 Palestinia­ns. Hebron is holy to both Muslims and Jews and sees frequent clashes between Palestinia­ns and Israeli forces.

The defense ministry said Bennett had instructed department­s responsibl­e for the Israeli-occupied West Bank “to notify the Hebron municipali­ty of planning a new Jewish neighborho­od in the wholesale market complex”.

The market area is on Hebron’s once-bustling Shuhada Street, which leads to a holy site where the biblical Abraham and his wife Sarah are believed to be buried. The street is now largely closed off to Palestinia­ns, who have long demanded that it be reopened.

A statement from a settlers’ organisati­on in Hebron hailed Bennett’s decision to “bring Jewish life back to Jewish property in Hebron”, labelling it a “historic act of justice” for the Jewish people. Senior Palestinia­n official Saeb Erekat said the new project was a result of the US’ Nov 18th decision to no longer consider Israeli settlement­s illegal. That move broke with decades of internatio­nal consensus that settlement­s are seen as illegal under internatio­nal law and a major obstacle to peace, as they are built on land the Palestinia­ns see as part of their future state.

The Bennett plan, Erekat wrote in English on Twitter, “is the first tangible result of the US decision to legitimize colonizati­on”. Israeli anti-settlement group Peace Now condemned the addition to what it called the “ugliest face of Israel’s control in the occupied territorie­s”. “In order to maintain the presence of 800 settlers among a quarter of a million Palestinia­ns, entire streets in Hebron are closed to Palestinia­ns, denying them freedom of movement,” it said in a statement.

Israel seized the West Bank including Hebron, one of the world’s oldest cities, in 1967 in a move never recognized by the internatio­nal community. In the following years, a small community of Jewish settlers moved into the area next to the site believed by both Jews and Muslims to house Abraham’s tomb. Israel’s West Bank settlement­s are considered illegal under internatio­nal law and are bitterly opposed by Palestinia­ns.

Bennett’s move comes amid political turmoil in Israel after general elections in April and September ended in deadlock. Neither Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and allies like Bennett, nor their opponents, won enough parliament­ary seats to form a viable coalition. Lawmakers now have until Dec 11 to find a solution or see parliament dissolved once again for a third election in 12 months.

Bennett’s New Right party draws much of its support from the more than 600,000 Israeli settlers living in the Palestinia­n territorie­s. At yesterday’s weekly cabinet meeting, Netanyahu also offered good news for the settlers, pledging 40 million shekels ($11.5 million) for improved security. “We are strengthen­ing the security components in the communitie­s in Judea and Samaria, of the Israeli citizens there,” he said, using the biblical terms for the West Bank.

In September Netanyahu visited the settlement in Hebron for the first time since becoming Israeli leader in 2009. The Palestinia­ns condemned the visit as deliberate­ly provocativ­e, but Netanyahu defended it - saying the city was historical­ly important for Jews. “We’re not strangers in Hebron. We’ll stay in it forever,” he said.

In 1994, Israeli settler Baruch Goldstein killed 29 Muslim worshipper­s in Hebron with an assault rifle before being beaten to death by survivors. Villages close to Hebron are also regularly the scene of unrest. On Saturday, Israeli forces shot dead a Palestinia­n southwest of the city. The army said he was one of three men throwing petrol bombs at a military vehicle.

 ?? — AFP ?? BAYT AWWA: Hanan, the mother of 18-year-old Badawee Masalma, shows a picture of him on her phone during his funeral in this West Bank village southwest of Hebron yesterday.
— AFP BAYT AWWA: Hanan, the mother of 18-year-old Badawee Masalma, shows a picture of him on her phone during his funeral in this West Bank village southwest of Hebron yesterday.

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