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Category: News News
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Published: 04 August 2010 04 August 2010
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Last Updated: 04 August 2010 04 August 2010
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Created: 04 August 2010 04 August 2010
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The Israeli settlement watchdog Peace Now has documented 492 violations
of a partial “moratorium” on new construction in the occupied West Bank
set to expire in September, the group said on Tuesday.
Based in part on aerial photographs, the group said construction had
begun on at least 600 housing units in 60 different settlements, at
least 492 of them in “direct violation” of the moratorium which was
imposed late last year.
Peace Now director Yariv Oppenheimer said the government has taken
significant steps to enforce the moratorium but that the newly
documented violations show it has not been entirely successful.
“In some places the government doesn’t know about it and in some places it is trying to ignore it,” he told AFP.
An Israeli government spokesperson referred questions to the Defense
Ministry, which could not immediately be reached for comment.
In an ordinary eight-month period 1,130 new homes would be built in the
settlements, the group said, meaning that the government’s “freeze” has
only reduced construction by half. And the 600 units are in addition to
2,000 housing units approved just before the freeze was imposed in
November 2009.
Israel’s hawkish Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reluctantly agreed
to the moratorium after months of US pressure aimed at reviving peace
talks with the Palestinians last suspended during the December 2008
Gaza war.
The Palestinians rejected the move as insufficient because it excluded
public buildings, housing projects already under way, and occupied and
annexed east Jerusalem, which they view as the capital of their
promised state.
Israel has adamantly rejected Palestinian demands that it extend the
moratorium and expand it to mostly Arab East Jerusalem – a requirement
if international law and numerous UN resolutions – which it has
occupied since the 1967 war.
In June Peace Now said that because the settlers had prepared for the
slowdown by approving a raft of new construction projects before it
took effect the partial freeze would have little impact if it were not
extended past September.
The United States said Monday now was the right time for Palestinians
and Israelis to resume direct negotiations, warning there would be
consequences if they failed to do so.
US State Department spokesman Philip Crowley declined to confirm that
President Barack Obama had warned Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
that a failure could undermine US-Palestinian ties, but also failed to
deny reports to that effect.
“We strongly believe that this is the time when the parties need to
move from proximity talks into direct negotiations,” Crowley told
reporters.
“Our message is that this is the right time and it’s an opportunity that both sides should not forsake,” he added.
The Palestinians and Israelis have since May been holding indirect
“proximity” talks – with former US Senator George Mitchell acting as a
go-between – but they have not held direct negotiations since Israel
launched a military offensive against Hamas militants in December 2007.
Abbas has conditioned the resumption of direct negotiations on a
complete Israeli halt to settlement building in the Palestinian West
Bank.
Under international law, all settlements built on land occupied since
1967 must be dismantled as part of a full Israeli withdrawal from those
areas.
Israeli officials in Jerusalem gave the green light on Monday to the
construction of 40 new homes in the Israeli-occupied eastern part of
the city, a municipal official said.
“The commission in charge of planning and construction in the
municipality has authorized the construction of 40 homes in Pisgat
Zeev,” Councilor Elisha Peleg told AFP.
The settlement was founded in 1984 and is home to 41,000 residents. The
go-ahead to build 40 new homes is part of an overall project to build
220 apartments, Deputy Mayor Kobi Khalon said earlier.
“Pisgat Zeev must be treated like any other Jerusalem neighborhood,” Khalon told the news website Ynet. – Agencies
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