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Israel gives initial nod to 800 settler homes

Published: 09 Aug 2013 - 03:46 am | Last Updated: 30 Jan 2022 - 04:11 pm

JERUSALEM: Israel has given preliminary approval for the construction of more than 800 new homes in Jewish settlements on occupied West Bank land where Palestinians seek statehood, an Israeli official said yesterday.

The move could complicate US-sponsored Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations, which resumed last month after an almost three-year freeze over the settlement dispute and whose second round is expected to take place next week.

Guy Inbar, spokesman for Israel’s military-run Civil Administration in the West Bank, said initial plans to build 800 new settler homes were approved on Wednesday, though actual construction would require a green light from the government.

“This is a lengthy process,” said Inbar, who did not immediately provide details on the plans.

Peace Now, an Israeli anti-settlement watchdog, put the number of new homes discussed by the Civil Administration on Wednesday at 1,096 and said they were earmarked for 11 settlements — some of them located deep within the West Bank.

Israel insists it would annex major West Bank settlement blocs, which are mainly situated close to the Israeli border, under any peace accord with the Palestinians. Most world powers regard all the settlements as illegal and Palestinians say the enclaves could deny them a viable and contiguous state.

Hanan Ashrawi, a Palestine Liberation Organisation executive member and former peace negotiator, accused Israel of “deliberately destroying the two-state solution and killing any sort of hope”.

She urged Washington to take steps to thwart the Israeli plans, also charging in a written statement that Israel was using peace talks as a “smoke screen” to continue expanding its enclaves in occupied land.

Settlement expansion has put Israel’s right-leaning government at loggerheads with the European Union, which issued guidelines last month banning EU financial assistance to Israeli organisations in occupied territory.

In a sign of concern over the restrictions, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convened senior cabinet ministers yesterday to discuss the EU edict.

An Israeli official said it was generally understood in the meeting that Israel would not sign deals with the EU based on the new directives, and that the ministers decided to seek more clarification from the 28-nation bloc on their implications.

REUTERS