Israel unveils plan to build another 1,400 settlement homes
Provocative expansion could derail US-brokered peace talks
Israel today published tenders for 1,400 new homes in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, days after US secretary of state John Kerry visited the region to push peace efforts with the Palestinians.
The
Palestinians have warned in the past that any further expansion of
Israeli settlements on land they seek for a state could derail
US-brokered peace talks that resumed in July after a three-year break
and are set to last until April.
Today’s
announcement had been expected, but was delayed until after Kerry ended
his visit. It also followed Israel’s release of 26 Palestinian prisoners
last month, who were freed as part of deal brokered by Washington to secure the resumption of peace negotiations.
Israel’s housing ministry issued a list of
settlements in the West Bank where it planned to construct 801 housing
units and another 600 in Jewish neighbourhoods in East Jerusalem.
The
ministry also re-issued tenders for a further 582 units in East
Jerusalem that had previously failed to attract bids from contractors.
Anti-settlement watchdog Peace Now
said that today’s announcement meant that since peace talks resumed
last year, Israel had announced plans for some 5,349 new homes in the
West Bank and East Jerusalem.
“These latest
tenders could cause negotiations to break down and destroy Kerry’s
efforts,” the general secretary of Peace Now, Yariv Oppenheimer,
said in a statement. Palestinians see settlements as an obstacle to
achieving a viable state in East Jerusalem and the West Bank,
territories Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East war, and the Gaza Strip from which it pulled out in 2005.
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu,
whose coalition government includes pro-settler parties, has defended
the recent expansion, saying the tenders were for homes in blocs that
would remain Israeli in any future peace accord. Most countries consider
Israel’s settlements there illegal.
The
Palestinians won an upgrade to their UN status in 2012 from “entity” to
“non-member state” in a vote perceived as a de facto recognition of
statehood and have threatened to join the International Criminal Court to confront Israel there. However, the Palestinians agreed last year to suspend any actions at the United Nations in exchange for the release of scores of Palestinians and a resumption of talks.
A
previous round of negotiations broke down in 2010 in a dispute over
settlement construction and since their revival this year, peace talks
have shown little sign of progress. Well over 500,000 Jewish settlers
live in East Jerusalem and the West Bank.

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