Chattanooga Times Free Press

Israel OKs plan for new Golan settlement named after Trump

-

JERUSALEM — An Israeli cabinet minister on Sunday said the government approved plans to build a new settlement in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights named after President Donald Trump.

Settlement­s Minister Tzipi Hotovely wrote on Facebook that her ministry will start preparatio­ns for Ramat Trump — Hebrew for “Trump Heights” — to house 300 families.

Israel captured the Golan Heights from Syria in the 1967 Mideast war and annexed it in 1981. Most of the internatio­nal community considers the move, and Israeli settlement­s in the territory, illegal under internatio­nal law.

But Trump signed an executive order recognizin­g the strategic mountainou­s plateau as Israeli territory in March 2019. The move came during a visit to Washington by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu just weeks before Israeli elections. The decision, just one of several diplomatic moves benefiting Israel, was widely applauded there.

The Israeli government’s approval of the plan, which according to Israeli media will involve earmarking $2.3 million for developing the town, advances a project announced by Netanyahu last year with great pomp and fanfare.

Last June, Netanyahu convened his Cabinet in the small hamlet of Qela for a vote on rebranding the community as a gesture of appreciati­on for the president’s recognitio­n of

Israeli sovereignt­y over the Golan Heights.

The small town of Qela is home to less than 300 people. Its original neighborho­od of Bruchim, which will be rebranded as Trump Heights, is home to less than a dozen.

At a Cabinet meeting on Sunday, Netanyahu said that Israel would “begin practical steps in establishi­ng the community of Ramat Trump on the Golan Heights, Israel’s sovereignt­y over which was recognized by President Trump.”

Israel has built dozens of settlement­s in the Golan over the years, with an estimated 26,000 Jewish settlers living there as of 2019. Roughly the same number of Arabs live there, most of them members of the Druze sect of Shiite Islam.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States