Palestinians carry the body of 30-year-old Hussein Awadallah during his funeral in the Nusairat refugee camp, northeast of Deir Al Balah, central Gaza Strip, yesterday. Awadallah was shot dead overnight by Israeli troops as he approached the no-go security area at the border.
JERUSALEM: Israel moved ahead yesterday with plans to build nearly 1,200 homes for Jewish settlers, holding fast to a settlement policy as cabinet ministers met to approve a release of Palestinian prisoners ahead of peace talks.
Israel has made a push on settlements since the resumption on July 30 of US-brokered talks on Palestinian statehood, signalling its intention to continue to build in major enclaves it wants to keep in any future peace deal.
While condemning settlement expansion, Palestinians have stopped short of threatening outright to abandon the negotiations, which are due to go into a second round in Jerusalem on Wednesday after a session in Washington.
Israeli media, in unconfirmed reports, have suggested yesterday’s housing plans were disclosed to Washington in advance and were aimed partly at overcoming opposition within the pro-settlement cabinet to prisoner releases designed to spur negotiations halted three
years ago.
The Housing Ministry said on its website that tenders were issued for building 793 new apartments in areas of the West Bank that Israel annexed after capturing the territory and the eastern part of Jerusalem in the 1967 Middle East war.
Plots for the construction of 394 more units were being sold in Ariel, Efrat, Maale Adumim and Betar, settlements in areas Israel has said it aims to retain in any land-for-peace accord.
“We shall continue with construction, everywhere,” Housing Minister Uri Ariel of the far-right Jewish Home party said at the formal relaunch of an Israeli housing project in East Jerusalem yesterday.
Ariel said his party would vote against the release of Palestinian prisoners, saying he was “against freeing terrorists. It goes against our security interests”.
Israeli Finance Minister Yair Lapid, whose centrist party is right-wing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s biggest partner in the governing coalition, called the decision to issue the settlement housing tenders “unhelpful to the peace process”.
Mark Regev, an Israeli government spokesman, dismissed the criticism saying: “The construction decided upon today in Jerusalem and in the settlement blocs are in areas that will remain part of Israel in any possible future peace agreement. This in no way changes the final map of peace. It changes nothing.”
Drawing Palestinian anger, Israel’s military-run Civil Administration in the West Bank gave preliminary approval on Thursday for the construction of more than 800 new settler homes — some of them in isolated settlements — but said it needed government approval before building could begin.
Most world powers regard all the settlements as illegal and Palestinians say the enclaves could deny them a viable and contiguous state.
“The international community must stand with this peace process and must stand shoulder to shoulder with us and hold Israel accountable for its continuing settlement activities,” Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erekat said.
REUTERS