The Borneo Post

Israel approves more than 1,100 new West Bank settlement homes

-

JERUSALEM: Israeli authoritie­s have approved more than 1,100 new settlement homes in the occupied West Bank, the Peace Now NGO said yesterday, the latest in a raft of such moves in recent months.

The approvals were given on Wednesday by a defence ministry committee with authority over settlement constructi­on.

Some 352 of the homes received final approval, while the others are at an earlier stage in the process, Hagit Ofran of Peace Now, which monitors settlement building, told AFP.

A total of 1,122 housing units were advanced, including seven already existing homes given retroactiv­e approval.

According to Ofran, the majority of the approvals are for settlement­s deep in the West Bank that Israel would likely need to evacuate as part of a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict.

“It’s a part of the general trend that the government is doing, which is to build all over the West Bank, even more in places that Israel would need to evict, and in this way to torpedo the possibilit­y for a two-state solution,” she said.

A shooting that killed an Israeli settler on Tuesday in the West Bank led to fresh calls for further settlement building, though the plans approved on Wednesday were already in the works.

According to Peace Now, 6,742 housing projects were approved in the settlement­s last year, the highest figure since 2013.

Israeli settlement­s are seen as illegal under internatio­nal law and major obstacles to peace as they are built on land the Palestinia­ns see as part of their future state.

Prominent members of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s right-wing government openly oppose Palestinia­n statehood. — AFP

 ??  ?? Tunisian security forces track down protesters in the Ettadhamen on the outskirts of Tunis after price hikes ignited protests in the North African country. — AFP photo
Tunisian security forces track down protesters in the Ettadhamen on the outskirts of Tunis after price hikes ignited protests in the North African country. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia