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Editorial Note: The
following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may
also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology.
Comments are in parentheses. |
Rate Of Illegal Israeli Settlement Construction on
Palestinian Lands Quadrupled in September 2010
Rate Of Israeli Settlement Construction Quadrupled In Last Month
Thursday October 21, 2010 10:56 by Saed Bannoura - IMEMC News
At least 500 new buildings have been constructed since Israeli
occupation government prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, lifted the
partial hold on new permits that was in place for six months prior to
September. Even while the so-called 'moratorium' was in place,
construction continued in dozens of illegal Israeli settlements in the
Palestinian territory of the West Bank, but with the hold lifted,
illegal Israeli settlers have gone on a 'building spree', according to
the Associated Press.
The new AP report includes interviews with
developers and municipal governments in the Israeli settlements in the
West Bank, who have documented a rate of construction that is four times
higher than in any period over the last two years.
All Israeli
settlements in the West Bank are considered illegal under international
law, as they are constructed on illegally-seized Palestinian land that
was taken by military force and is now being used to house Israeli
civilians.
But the Israeli government disagrees with this
international statute, and has issued permits for many of the 350
Israeli settlements currently in place on Palestinian land in the West
bank. Israeli law specifically promotes the construction and expansion
of settlements in contravention of international law and the Fourth
Geneva Convention, rewarding settlers if they are able to 'hold onto
land' that was once Palestinian for a period of time. After the settlers
establish housing on the illegally seized land, Israeli law requires
that the Israeli government provide water and electricity to “legalize”
the settlements and annex the land for the state of Israel.
Since
its creation in 1948, the state of Israel has never defined its borders,
and has continually expanded onto Palestinian land taken by military
force. This type of expansion is specifically prohibited under the
Fourth Geneva Convention, to which Israel is a signatory.
The
current 'building spree' of construction is taking place on land
designated during 'peace negotiations' as part of a future Palestinian
state. Because of the ongoing settlement construction, Palestinian
negotiators have argued that Israeli authorities are making any chance
of a negotiated peace impossible by carving up what's left of historic
Palestine into smaller and smaller islands of territory that some call 'bantustans',
in reference to the South African term for isolated land reservations
where black South Africans were forced to live during the apartheid era.
A Palestinian official told the Israeli daily, Yedioth Ahranoth,
"This figure is alarming and is another indicator that Israel is not
serious about the peace process, which is supposed to be about ending
the occupation."
According to Associated Press reporters who
conducted the investigation, the actual number of new units being
constructed may be much higher than their estimate of 500, as many
settlements are engaging in expansion in secret, and refusing to
disclose how many new units are actually under construction.
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