CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: PROF. KHALID MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Default / Miscellaneous

Israel okays 1,500 settler homes in East Jerusalem

Published: 18 Dec 2012 - 06:15 am | Last Updated: 05 Feb 2022 - 10:03 pm

JERUSALEM: Israel yesterday gave the green light for developers to go ahead with controversial plans to build 1,500 settler homes in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem, the interior ministry said.

Spokeswoman Efrat Orbach said the ministry’s planning committee had told the applicants to trim their request to build 1,600 new housing units at Ramat Shlomo to 1,500 and resubmit it “for final approval”.

The Palestinian leadership responded by saying it would seek a UN Security Council meeting on the Israeli plans to build the new settler homes. 

The leadership was about to take “important and necessary measures against Israel’s settlement building, including recourse to the UN Security Council, to prevent implementation of these decisions,” president Mahmud Abbas’s spokesman Nabil Abu Rudeina said.

The Israeli plan caused a diplomatic rift with Washington when it was first announced in 2010 as US Vice President Joe Biden met top Israeli officials in Jerusalem to boost Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. It has lain dormant since August 2011 but two weeks ago the ministry announced that it had been revived.

Orbach said that the committee heard public objections and told to make changes.

 “It reduced the plan from 1,600 to 1,500 and now the plan has to be resubmitted and meet the conditions in order to get final approval,” she said.“It could take months more, or years.”

Ramat Shlomo is a Jewish settlement in the mainly Arab eastern sector of Jerusalem which Israel seized in 1967 and later annexed in a move not recognised by the international community.

Yesterday’s announcement will only add to international discontent caused by a separate Israeli decision to plan 3,000 more settler homes in the West Bank and east Jerusalem after the Palestinians won upgraded status at the United Nations last month. AFP