The Day

Israel announces largest West Bank land seizure since 1993 as Blinken visits

- By CATE BROWN

Israel's far-right finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, announced the seizure of 3.8 square miles of Palestinia­n territory in the West Bank on Friday. The move marks the single largest land seizure by the Israeli government since the 1993 Oslo accords, according to Peace Now, a settlement watchdog group.

“While there are those in Israel and the world who seek to undermine our right over the Judea and Samaria area and the country in general,” Smotrich said Friday, referring to the territory by its biblical name, “we are promoting settlement through hard work and in a strategic manner all over the country.”

Israeli settlement­s in the West Bank are considered illegal under internatio­nal law. Still, Israel has used land orders like the one issued Friday to gain control over 16 percent of Palestinia­n-controlled lands in the West Bank. The newly seized area includes parcels in the Jordan Valley and between the settlement­s of Maale Adumim and Keidar.

The announceme­nt came as Secretary of State Antony Blinken landed in Tel Aviv for talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu about the future of the war in Gaza. Blinken's arrival followed meetings in Cairo with several Arab leaders and amid calls from Democratic senators for President Biden to establish a “bold, public framework” for a two-state solution that recognizes a “nonmilitar­ized Palestinia­n state.”

Friday's land order is particular­ly problemati­c for the prospect of a two-state solution, experts say.

“If Israel confiscate­s land around Jerusalem, all the way to the Dead Sea, there will be no future for a Palestinia­n capital in East Jerusalem,” said Hamza Zubiedat, a land rights activist for the Ramallah-based Ma'an Developmen­t Center. “This is where a Palestinia­n capital was supposed to be located, according to the American and European talks.”

The land transfer will also cut across the West Bank, dividing the north and south.

“If the Israelis annex this area near Maale Adumim, it will be a catastroph­e for Palestinia­ns who live in the south,” Zubiedat said. “Palestinia­n traders, especially in the south, will be cut off, and it will become impossible to have any independen­t Palestinia­n ways of life.”

More than 40 percent of the West Bank is under the control of Israeli settlers, according to the Israel-based rights group B'Tselem, and more than half-a-million Jewish residents now live in the West Bank. Israel's government has also used incentive programs to move Jewish residents into West Bank settlement­s, where more than 200 settlement­s and unofficial outposts have fractured the Palestinia­n territory and displaced Palestinia­n residents. In recent years, the Housing Ministry has offered subsidized apartments in the West Bank through a lottery system.

Palestinia­ns have little ability to stop the land transfers. After the 1967 war, Israel issued a military order that stopped the process of land registrati­on across the West Bank. Now families lack the paperwork to prove that they have private ownership over their land. And tax records, the only other evidence of West Bank property rights, are not accepted by Israeli authoritie­s.

In June, the Knesset waived a long-standing legal precedent that required the prime minister and the defense minister to sign off on West Bank settlement constructi­on at every phase. Smotrich enjoys near-total control over constructi­on planning and approvals in the West Bank, and approved a record number of settlement­s in 2023.

“Israel has reached the conclusion that they could get away with this huge land grab because of the lack of internatio­nal action,” said Sarit Michaeli, Internatio­nal Advocacy Lead at B'Tselem. “There have been individual economic U.S. sanctions placed on violent settlers, but the greater violence of the Occupation is this colossal land theft.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States