176 new homes approved in East Jerusalem

 

JERUSALEM: A picture taken from Jabel Mukaber, a Palestinian neighborhood in Israeli-occupied East Jerusalem shows the Israeli settlement of Nof Zion in the foreground, and the Old City of Jerusalem with the Dome of the Rock in the background. —AFP

JERUSALEM: Israeli authorities yesterday approved a major expansion of an east Jerusalem settlement, signing off on plans to add 176 homes, the city's deputy mayor said. The latest approvals come after Israel last week advanced plans for more than 2,600 settlement homes in various areas of the occupied West Bank. The expansion approved yesterday would create the largest Israeli settlement inside a Palestinian neighborhood of the city, NGOs say. It will allow the Nof Zion settlement to add 176 housing units to the 91 existing homes. The settlement is located in the annexed east Jerusalem Palestinian neighborhood of Jabel Mukaber.

The plans were approved by a Jerusalem planning committee, Deputy Mayor Meir Turjeman said. However, the property remains the subject of an ongoing ownership dispute between two different firms and the court case must be resolved before construction can move ahead, a spokeswoman for the Peace Now settlement watchdog said. The approvals were granted but made conditional upon the case being resolved. Peace Now and other NGOs say the approvals would make Nof Zion the largest Israeli settlement inside any Palestinian neighborhood of east Jerusalem and possibly also of the West Bank.

Most settlements, particularly in the West Bank, are located outside of Palestinian residential areas. They are typically far larger than Nof Zion. Jerusalem's status is ultrasensitive and central to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Israel occupied the West Bank and east Jerusalem in the Six-Day War of 1967. It later annexed east Jerusalem in a move never recognized by the international community. It sees the entire city as its indivisible capital, while the Palestinians want the eastern sector as the capital of their future state.

'Actions on the ground'

Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat said in a statement earlier this week announcing the expected approval of the permits that "we are continuing to build and to strengthen Jerusalem". "We are reunifying Jerusalem with actions on the ground," he said. Palestinians and human rights groups however strongly criticized the plans, saying they would further diminish hopes for an independent Palestinian state with east Jerusalem as its capital.

Palestinian cartographer Khalil Tufakji spoke of the "sensitivity" of the area of the project and its "strategic location" south of Jerusalem's Old City. Senior Palestine Liberation Organization official Hanan Ashrawi said earlier this week that the new Nof Zion units were part of Israel's plan "to impose a de facto one-state solution." "Without Jerusalem as the capital of Palestine, there will be no Palestinian state, and without a Palestinian state, there will be no peace or stability in the region," she said.

Government officials have pledged a major boost in settlement home approvals this year, with US President Donald Trump so far much less critical of such plans than his predecessor Barack Obama. Israeli officials say around 12,000 housing units will be given various stages of approval this year, four times the number in 2016. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu heads what is seen as the most right-wing government in Israel's history, and settlement advocates wield heavy influence in his ruling coalition.

Settlement building in the West Bank, including east Jerusalem, is considered illegal under international law. It is seen as a major obstacle to peace as the settlements are built on land the Palestinians regard as part of their future state. Prominent members of Netanyahu's coalition openly oppose the idea of a Palestinian state and advocate annexing most of the West Bank. Netanyahu recently said he plans no uprooting of settlements, blaming Palestinian "incitement" and attacks against Israelis, among other issues, for the lack of progress in peace efforts._ AFP