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Written by BBC News BBC News
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Category: News News
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Published: 18 August 2009 18 August 2009
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Last Updated: 18 August 2009 18 August 2009
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Created: 18 August 2009 18 August 2009
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New Israeli settlements 'on hold'
Israel's government has stopped issuing new settler housing tenders in
the West Bank, hoping to reach common ground with the US, a senior
minister says.
The US administration has been putting Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu under pressure to freeze all settlement work, which has
strained normally close ties.
"There is no freeze, there is a waiting period," said Housing Minster Ariel Atias in an Israeli radio interview.
But anti-settlement groups say work in settlements has in fact increased.
“ The Obama administration is being tough with us ”
Israeli Housing Minister Ariel Atias
Mr Atias said in the radio interview: "Since the government was
established five months ago, no tenders have been issued for Judea and
Samaria," referring to government-issued contracts for construction of
new homes in the occupied West Bank.
"It's no secret that the prime minister is trying to reach some sort of
understandings with the Obama administration, which is being tough with
us," he said.
The US administration of Barack Obama has demanded Israel halt all
settlement activity in line with the international peace plan known as
the roadmap, which also demands Palestinian moves to quash anti-Israeli
militants.
The US is also lobbying Arab states to persuade them to move towards
normalising ties with Israel, to mitigate any concessions Israel feels
it is making.
Israel insists settlements must be allowed to enjoy "natural growth", so families are not split up by any freeze.
A construction freeze could split the ruling Israeli coalition,
correspondents say, as it is dominated by hardline supporters of the
settler movement.
'No slowdown'
The Peace Now anti-settlement group says the last fresh government tender for settlement construction was in November 2008.
That was when former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert was still in power and before the Obama administration took office.
But Mr Netanyahu's office has denied the hiatus amounted to an official
freeze and continued to insist on "natural growth" construction in
settlements.
Campaigners from Yesh Din said there was no sign of a slowdown on the
ground, with construction continuing in government-funded projects, in
the private sector and in unauthorised outposts.
"In practice, on the ground, construction is continuing and the pace is even picking up," said Yesh Din researcher Dror Etkes.
About 500,000 Jews live in the West Bank and East Jerusalem
settlements, which are illegal under international law, among 2.5
million Palestinians.
The land was captured by Israel in the 1967 war and Israel insists its
undecided status means the settlements are legal. But Palestinians view
them as constituting the theft of their homeland, while new projects
further jeopardise their prospects of establishing an independent state.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/8208315.stm
Published: 2009/08/18 17:34:00 GMT
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