Viet Nam News

Israelis start to revive flashpoint settlement

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Israelis started reviving a flashpoint outpost settlement in the occupied West Bank on Monday, AFP journalist­s said, constructi­ng a building at the site which has drawn internatio­nal attention.

Using a truck, diggers and an earth roller, work got underway to erect a portable building at the northern West Bank site.

AFP journalist­s saw Israeli soldiers guarding around 20 people carrying out constructi­on work at the Homesh site, which Israel evacuated nearly two decades ago.

The latest developmen­t comes weeks after the office of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pledged his government had no plans to reconstruc­t the site, after a parliament­ary vote on the matter sparked ire abroad.

It was hailed as a "moving historic moment" by Israel's National Security Minister Itamar Ben-gvir -- an extreme-right settler.

Lawmakers in March voted to annul part of a law which banned Israelis from living in areas of the West Bank which the state evacuated in 2005, the same year Israel withdrew from the Gaza Strip.

"The government has no intention of establishi­ng new communitie­s in these areas," Netanyahu's office said in March.

Israel's military occupation of the West Bank has been in force since the 1967 Sixday War.

Neither the army nor the defence ministry commented on their role in Monday's developmen­ts at Homesh when contacted by AFP.

The civilians at the site refused to discuss the matter when approached by AFP journalist­s.

The United States, Israel's top ally, said this month it was "deeply troubled by the Israeli government's order that allows its citizens to establish a permanent presence in the Homesh outpost".

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