Arab News

Israel moves ahead on sensitive East Jerusalem housing plans

Land Authority opens up tenders for over 1,200 new homes in the strategic settlement of Givat Hamatos in Jerusalem

- AP Jerusalem

Israel is moving forward on the constructi­on of hundreds of new homes in a sensitive East Jerusalem settlement, a watchdog group said on Sunday, a move that would defy internatio­nal consensus against Israeli building in areas that would cut Palestinia­ns off from the city’s eastern sector, which they claim as their future capital.

The Israel Land Authority announced on its website on Sunday that it had opened up tenders for more than 1,200 new homes in the strategic settlement of Givat Hamatos in Jerusalem.

The move may test ties with the

incoming administra­tion of President-elect Joe Biden, who is expected to take a firmer tack against Israeli settlement expansion after four years of a more lenient policy under President Donald Trump. The settlement watchdog group Peace Now and other critics say constructi­on in the settlement would seal off the Palestinia­n city of Bethlehem and the southern West Bank from East Jerusalem, further cutting off access for the Palestinia­ns to the eastern part of the city.

It also comes as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is set to travel

to the region this week, where he is expected to visit an Israeli settlement in the West Bank, which previous US secretarie­s of state have avoided. Palestinia­n officials, who have been snubbed by the Trump administra­tion, have denounced the planned visit. Palestinia­n Prime Minister Mohammad

Shtayyeh tweeted on Friday that this was a “dangerous precedent” that legalizes settlement­s.

Brian Reeves, a spokesman for Peace Now, said the move on Sunday allows contractor­s to begin bidding on the tenders, a process that will conclude just days before Biden’s inaugurati­on. Constructi­on

could then begin within months. “This is a lethal blow to the prospects for peace and the possibilit­y of a two-state solution,” between Israel and the Palestinia­ns, Peace Now said in a statement, adding that Israel was “taking advantage of the final weeks of the Trump administra­tion in order to set facts on

the ground that will be exceedingl­y hard to undo in order to achieve peace.”

The Palestinia­ns seek the West Bank, along with the Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem — areas Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast war — for their future state.

Much of Jerusalem is already blocked off from the West Bank by a series of checkpoint­s and the separation barrier. Israel has previously moved forward on plans to build in E1, another sensitive area east of Jerusalem that critics say, with Givat Hamatos, would block East Jerusalem off entirely from the West Bank.

 ?? AP ?? A Jewish man walks past a constructi­on site of new residentia­l project in the East Jerusalem settlement of Ramat Shlomo, as Israel plans hundreds of new illegal homes.
AP A Jewish man walks past a constructi­on site of new residentia­l project in the East Jerusalem settlement of Ramat Shlomo, as Israel plans hundreds of new illegal homes.

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