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freepalestine
15th November 2010, 00:36
Peace Now: Settlers have begun work on 1,629 new houses in six weeks since freeze ended

Monday November 15, 2010 02:16 by Saed Bannoura, with excerpts from Peace Now
- IMEMC News [/URL]

According to the Israeli watchdog group Peace Now, Israeli settlers living in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem in violation of international law have engaged in a frenzy of building since the partial moratorium on construction was lifted unilaterally by the Israeli government on September 27th. Palestinians, on whose land the settlements are being constructed, had no say in the matter.
http://imemc.org/attachments/nov2010/kedumim.jpg

New construction in Kedumim settlement - October 2010 - Peace now photo

According to Peace Now’s count, since the end of the freeze in October 26th, the settlers managed to start to build 1,629 housing units, and even to dig the foundations for 1,116 of them. The works started in 63 settlements, 46 of them east the Separation Barrier and 17 on the western side of it.

In all of year 2009, according to the Israeli CBS data, the works on 1,888 new housing units have started. Had the construction continued at the same speed without the Freeze, there would have been started 1,574 units during the 10 months of the freeze. In the 6 weeks since the end of the freeze, the settlers managed to start a similar number of units.

A Peace Now spokesperson said, “It turns out that the Settlement Freeze was no more than a 10 months delay in the construction, and the settlers managed to fill-in the gap very fast. The Government of Israel must renew the Freeze in a way that will stop all settlement activity including the projects that started in the last few weeks, until there is a final agreement between the Palestinians and Israel regarding the borders and the future of the settlements”.

Peace Now conducted many field trips and aerial tours in the last few weeks in order to be able to estimate the number of new construction starts in the settlements. As expected, without an official settlement freeze the settlers started to renew the construction in those places where the work was stopped because of the moratorium, and to start new projects as well.

According to Peace Now, “It seems that the effort by the settlers is to get to dig the foundations of the buildings as fast as possible, assuming that when there's another moratorium it will be based on the same criteria of the previous one: structures that already have foundations – could be completed; Structures that don't, were stopped according to the freeze order. This is why the settlers are in a kind of a race to dig the foundations as fast as possible even if the infrastructure (the swage systems, roads, electricity etc.) is not completed yet.”

Most of the construction today is taking place in the settlements that are more isolated, further deep in the West Bank and more ideological. According to Peace Now, the reason for the rise in the construction in the more isolated settlements as opposed to the bigger settlements that are closer to Israel is mainly because the Government of Israel has not approved many new projects in the last few years. In the bigger, closer to Israel settlements the construction is mainly initiated by the government and most of the construction must be approved by the Minister of Defense before it can start.

According to the numbers obtained by Peace Now, the Netanyahu government approved the construction of some 630 housing units (another 1,500 units were approved by Minister Barak during the year 2008 before the Netanyahu government was established). Most of those units are currently under construction and there are not too many units left to construct in the already approved projects.

However, in most of the isolated settlements, the settlers do not need another approval by the government, and they can build thousands (approx. 13,000) of units based on old approvals given in the past. Most of the construction we see today is based on very old approvals.

All Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank are considered illegal under international law and the Fourth Geneva Convention, as they are constructed on land illegally seized from the indigenous Palestinian population by military force.

[URL]http://imemc.org/article/59905 (http://www.revleft.com/vb/../report_posts?subject=Report post: Story 59905 with title: Peace Now: Settlers have begun work on 1,629 new houses in six weeks since freeze ended&message=Report post: Story 59905 with title: Peace Now: Settlers have begun work on 1,629 new houses in six weeks since freeze ended%0Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.imemc.org%2Findex.php%3Fo bj_id%3D53%26story_id%3D59905%26%0A%0AEnter+your+r eason+here+-+please+do+not+remove+the+above+link+as+it+will+al low+an+editor+to+easily+remove+the+offending+conte nt) PALESTINE INDYMEDIA

freepalestine
15th November 2010, 00:44
Jerusalem Municipality Weighs Plans To Build 130 Units in East Jerusalem

http://www.revleft.com/vb/../graphics/date.gif Friday November 12, 2010 10:35http://www.revleft.com/vb/../graphics/person.gif by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC & Agencies http://www.revleft.com/vb/../graphics/report.gif (http://www.revleft.com/vb/../report_posts?subject=Report post: Story 59894 with title: Jerusalem Municipality Weighs Plans To Build 130 Units in East Jerusalem&message=Report post: Story 59894 with title: Jerusalem Municipality Weighs Plans To Build 130 Units in East Jerusalem%0Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.imemc.org%2Findex.php %3Fobj_id%3D53%26story_id%3D59894%26%0A%0AEnter+yo ur+reason+here+-+please+do+not+remove+the+above+link+as+it+will+al low+an+editor+to+easily+remove+the+offending+conte nt)


The Jerusalem Municipality is weighing plans for the construction of 130 units in the areas located between Beit Safafa and Gilo settlement in occupied East Jerusalem, Israeli sources reported. http://imemc.org/attachments/nov2010/settlement_1.jpg
Setlement - File Nofzion.co.il

The idea started after a proposal was submitted for the construction of a hotel that includes 130 separate units in Gilo.

Israeli daily, Yedioth Aharonoth, reported that the project was initiated by a private investor. It includes the construction of three eleven-story apartment buildings.

The Jerusalem Municipality said that the owner of the land is asking to be allowed to use it for housing projects instead of being part of the hotel industry.

Jerusalem city council member, Yosef Alalu, a member of Meretz movement, slammed the plan and stated that its timing is not a coincidence.

Alalu stated that Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, and Jerusalem Mayor, Nir Barkat, fear holding talks with the Palestinians, and instead resort to “playing small games to obstruct peace talks”.

On Thursday, U.S. Secretary of State, Hilary Clinton, vowed to find a way to push the peace process forwards.

On his side, Netanyahu claimed that he is serious in achieving peace with the Palestinians, and demanded more Arab countries to be involved in the peace process.

http://imemc.org/article/59894