Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Israel eyes huge east Jerusalem settlement project

A Palestinian youth hurls a stone toward Israeli forces during a weekly protest against the Israeli occupation in the West Bank village of Nilin on Friday. AFP photo

A Palestinian youth hurls a stone toward Israeli forces during a weekly protest against the Israeli occupation in the West Bank village of Nilin on Friday. AFP photo
Israel is set to approve a huge new construction project of at least 1,400 homes in occupied east Jerusalem, media and the local council said on Sunday, defying pressure to halt settlement building that has stalled peace talks with the Palestinians.
The massive construction project will add homes to the annexed east Jerusalem settlement neighborhood of Gilo and is expected to receive final approval from the district planning commission within days.
The project is likely to spark condemnation from the international community, which has repeatedly called on Israel to avoid new building projects in mainly Arab east Jerusalem. Jerusalem's municipal council in a statement confirmed the project, but said it was part of a long-standing policy to expand housing availability for the city's Jewish and Arab residents.
"There has been no change in the policy towards construction in Jerusalem for the last 40 years," it said. "The Jerusalem municipality continues to promote both Jewish and Arab construction in the city."
Gilo is one of the first and largest Jewish neighborhoods in Jerusalem that Israel has built on land captured in the 1967 Six-Day War. It lies on the southern edge of the city, next to the West Bank town of Bethlehem.
The project drew immediate criticism from Israeli left-wing politicians and activists, as well as Palestinian condemnation. "We strongly condemn this Israeli escalation and continued decisions in the area of settlements and the imposition of new facts on the ground," chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat said. "I think it's the time for the U.S. administration to officially hold the Israeli government responsible for the collapse of the peace process."
U.S.-brokered peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians have deadlocked over the issue of Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank and east Jerusalem. The Palestinians walked out of direct peace talks three weeks after they started in September when Israel baulked at extending a 10-month partial freeze on settlement construction in the West Bank.
They refuse to negotiate with Israel while it builds on land they want for a future Palestinian state.
In March 2010, the interior ministry announced a plan to build 1,600 settler homes in Ramat Shlomo, an Orthodox Jewish neighborhood in east Jerusalem. The announcement, which came as U.S. Vice President Joe Biden was visiting Israel, provoked fierce American opposition and soured relations with Washington for several months.

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