report
Reuters / Ammar Awad
Israel approved “an unprecedented” number of 13,851 new settler homes during nine-months of peace talks with Palestine, an Israeli NGO revealed. Israel also declared a record amount of territories its state land, meaning more settlements may follow.
Israeli settlement watchdog, Peace Now, which issued its reporton Tuesday, said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “broke all construction records in the settlements” in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
“This is an unprecedented number representing an average of 50 housing units per day or 1,540 per month,” the left-wing NGO said.
The plans were all in West Bank areas, with 4,793 units approved for the construction in “isolated” settlements and 1,768 units closer to the Green Line, which separates Israeli territory and the occupied West Bank.
Citing figures from Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics, Peace Now pointed out that construction doubled in the past year: in the second half of 2013 some 828 new units were started in the settlements, while at the equivalent time in 2012, only 484 units were started.
Peace now stresses that the number of tenders granted in the last year was four times bigger than in the past. The paper comes on the same day as US-brokered peace talks between Israel and Palestine formally ended.
On April 28, the Daily Beast made public a comment by US Secretary of State John Kerry, in which he criticized the Israeli government’s settlements policy, saying it halted the peace talks between Israel and Palestine.
“There is a fundamental confrontation and it is over settlements – 14,000 new settlement units announced since we began negotiations. It’s very difficult for any leader to deal under that cloud,” Kerry said, according to The Daily Beast that claimed it obtained a recording of his comments.
A complete freeze on settlement construction was one of the Palestinians’ fundamental conditions for resuming talks. However, Benjamin Netanyahu refused to accept the fact that settlement building was counterproductive to peace efforts.
In one of his recent TV interviews, Netanyahu blamed failed talks on Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ refusal to recognize Israel as a Jewish state.
Reuters / Ammar Awad