Albuquerque Journal

Israel OKs hundreds of settlement homes

Last-minute push while Trump still in power irks Palestinia­ns, many others

- BY JOSEF FEDERMAN

JERUSALEM — Israeli authoritie­s on Sunday advanced plans to build nearly 800 homes in West Bank settlement­s, in a last-minute surge of approvals before the friendly Trump administra­tion leaves office later this week.

COGAT, the Israeli defense body that authorizes settlement constructi­on, confirmed the approvals, which drew swift condemnati­ons from the Palestinia­ns.

The anti-settlement monitoring group Peace Now said that over 90% of the homesites are deep inside the West Bank, which the Palestinia­ns seek as the heartland of a future independen­t state, and over 200 homes were located in unauthoriz­ed outposts that the government had decided to legalize.

Israel has stepped up settlement constructi­on during President Donald Trump’s term. According to Peace Now, Israel approved or advanced constructi­on of over 12,000 settlement homes in 2020, the highest number in any year since it began recording statistics in 2012.

“By promoting hundreds of settlement units, Prime Minister Netanyahu is once again putting his personal political interests over those of the country,” the group said. “Not only will this settlement activity erode the possibilit­y for a conflict-ending resolution with the Palestinia­ns in the long term, but in the short term it needlessly sets Israel on a collision course with the incoming Biden administra­tion.”

Netanyahu’s office said last week that he would seek approvals for the latest constructi­on projects. They include 100 homes in Tal Menashe, a settlement where an Israeli woman was killed last month in an attack for which a Palestinia­n man has been charged.

The Palestinia­ns claim all of the West Bank, captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war, as part of a future independen­t state. They say the growing settler population, approachin­g 500,000 people, makes it increasing­ly difficult to achieve their dream of independen­ce.

Nabil Abu Rdeneh, spokesman for Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas, said Sunday’s decision marked a “pre-emptive attempt by the Israeli government to undermine any effort that the U.S. President-elect Joe Biden’s administra­tion might make to relaunch the stalled peace process.”

Jordan, which borders the West Bank, and the European Union also condemned the Israeli announceme­nt. The EU said it is “contrary to internatio­nal law and further undermines the prospects of a viable two-state solution.”

A string of U.S. administra­tions, along with the rest of the internatio­nal community, opposed settlement constructi­on. But Trump, surrounded by a team of advisers with close ties to the settler movement, took a different approach. His administra­tion did not criticize Israeli settlement announceme­nts, and in a landmark decision, announced in 2018 that it did not consider settlement­s to be illegal under internatio­nal law.

As a result, Israel approved plans for over 27,000 settler homes during Trump’s four-year term, more than 2½ times the number approved during President Barack Obama’s second term, according to Peace Now.

Biden is expected to return to the traditiona­l U.S. position of opposing settlement­s, setting the stage for a possible clash with Netanyahu.

 ?? MAHMOUD ILLEAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Israeli authoritie­s advanced plans Sunday to build an additional 780 homes in West Bank settlement­s while Donald Trump is still president, according to an anti-settlement monitoring group.
MAHMOUD ILLEAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Israeli authoritie­s advanced plans Sunday to build an additional 780 homes in West Bank settlement­s while Donald Trump is still president, according to an anti-settlement monitoring group.

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