You are here
Israel approves 2,600 settler housing units in East Jerusalem — NGO
By AFP - Oct 01,2014 - Last updated at Oct 01,2014
OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Israel is to press ahead with the planned construction of 2,610 settler housing units in occupied East Jerusalem, a watchdog said Wednesday, with the move angering Palestinian leaders.
The housing units, which have been slated for construction since 2012 in the neighbourhood of Givat Hamatos, were given final approval last week, Peace Now said in a statement.
Hagit Ofran, spokeswoman for the Israeli non-governmental group, told AFP the government could now publish tenders for the project, but that it would be months before building actually began.
The settlements watchdog said the plans damaged prospects for peace and an eventual independent Palestinian state.
"Givat Hamatos is destructive to the two state solution," it said.
"It divides the potential Palestinian state... [Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu continues his policy of destroying the possibility of a two state solution."
The timing was a political decision, Ofran said, but the exact reason was unclear.
Housing Minister Uri Ariel, who himself lives in a settlement, insisted on army radio it was part of "the normal process of authorisation necessary before any construction project in Jerusalem".
Hanan Ashrawi, a leader of the Palestine Liberation Organisation, slammed the Givat Hamatos plans, saying in a statement the Israeli government was more interested in "stealing land than making peace".
Israel's settlement building in the occupied West Bank and annexed Arab East Jerusalem, which is illegal under international law, has caused the breakdown of several rounds of peace talks.
The settlements are built on land the Palestinians want for their future state.
Some 200,000 settlers live in East Jerusalem neighbourhoods, as well as some 306,000 Palestinians, according to Jerusalem's municipality.
Related Articles
Israel on Friday published tenders to build 450 new settler housing units in the occupied West Bank, a watchdog said, in a plan denounced by the Palestinians as a "war crime".
Israel approved Monday plans for some 500 new settler housing units in occupied East Jerusalem, a watchdog said, a week after a government pledge to build the structures drew Palestinian ire.
OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Israel has approved plans for more than 200 new settler units in the occupied West Bank, adding to a sharp increase in