Israel evicts settlers from illegally built West Bank homes

Israeli security forces remove a protester during the eviction of 15 Jewish settler families from the illegal outpost of Netiv Ha’avot in the Israeli occupied West Bank. (Reuters)
  • After the eviction, Israeli forces are expected to demolish the structures in the Netiv HaAvot unauthorized outpost.
  • Israel’s Supreme Court ordered the eviction in 2016, saying the homes were illegally built on private Palestinian land.

JERUSALEM: Israeli police on Tuesday began evacuating Jewish settlers from 15 homes built illegally on private Palestinian land in the West Bank.
Dozens of settlers protested against the evacuation, with some throwing stones and bottles at police. Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said three officers were lightly wounded in the scuffles and that police arrested two protesters.
Protesters opposed to the move also blocked the entrance to Jerusalem, snarling traffic.
Rosenfeld said the evacuation proceeded mostly smoothly, with families leaving their homes without resisting.
After the eviction, Israeli forces are expected to demolish the structures in the Netiv HaAvot unauthorized outpost. The government says it will compensate the residents and rebuild their homes on nearby lands that are not privately owned.
Israel’s Supreme Court ordered the eviction in 2016, saying the homes were illegally built on private Palestinian land while not determining the precise ownership of the land.
Israel captured the West Bank along with east Jerusalem from Jordan in the 1967 war and today about 600,000 settlers live in those areas. Most of the international community considers settlements to be either illegal or illegitimate.
The Palestinians seek the territories along with the Gaza Strip for their hoped-for state.
A law passed last year legalizing dozens of settler outposts in the West Bank is currently being challenge at the High Court.