Boston Herald

Jerusalem building approval rankles U.S.

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JERUSALEM — Israeli planning authoritie­s issued building permits for 181 new homes in east Jerusalem yesterday, drawing a harsh rebuke from the United States.

Jerusalem spokeswoma­n Brachie Sprung said plans in the Gilo area were first approved in 2012 and that yesterday’s approvals were for “technical details of plot distributi­on.”

She said more detailed building permits will be required before the units are built. But the approval nonetheles­s raised hackles in the U.S. State Department.

“We strongly oppose settlement activity,” spokesman John Kirby told reporters, accusing Israel of actions that “risk entrenchin­g a one-state reality” and raise serious questions about the Jewish state’s commitment to a negotiated settlement with the Palestinia­ns.

Israel captured east Jerusalem and the West Bank in 1967.

Israel subsequent­ly annexed east Jerusalem and considers areas like Gilo to be neighborho­ods of its capital. The Palestinia­ns claim east Jerusalem as their future capital, and most of the world considers settlement constructi­on there and in the West Bank illegal or illegitima­te.

In October, the State Department lashed out at Israel for approving a new settlement in the West Bank soon after the U.S. agreed to a $38 billion military aid package for Israel.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? CONTROVERS­Y: A Palestinia­n boy sits in the yard of his house, backdroppe­d by an Israeli housing developmen­t in east Jerusalem in 2009. More houses are now planned.
AP FILE PHOTO CONTROVERS­Y: A Palestinia­n boy sits in the yard of his house, backdroppe­d by an Israeli housing developmen­t in east Jerusalem in 2009. More houses are now planned.

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