Reversal of Israel approval of new West Bank settlement units urged

Update Palestinians walk past a burnt car, which was set on fire by Israeli settlers, near the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah. (AFP file photo)
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Palestinians walk past a burnt car, which was set on fire by Israeli settlers, near the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah. (AFP file photo)
Update Palestinian demonstrators gesture next to Israeli forces during a protest against Israeli settlements in Masafer Yatta, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. (Reuters/File Photo)
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Palestinian demonstrators gesture next to Israeli forces during a protest against Israeli settlements in Masafer Yatta, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. (Reuters/File Photo)
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Updated 01 July 2023
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Reversal of Israel approval of new West Bank settlement units urged

Palestinians walk past a burnt car, which was set on fire by Israeli settlers, near the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah.
  • This week, Israel approved over 5,700 new settlement units
  • Violence has been surging in the West Bank, including deadly clashes in Jenin

LONDON: Britain, Australia and Canada have called on Israel’s government to reverse a decision to approve new settlement units in the West Bank, saying they are “deeply concerned” by an ongoing cycle of violence.
This week, Israel approved over 5,700 new settlement units in the West Bank and earlier this month instituted changes to the settlement approval process which facilitate swifter approval of construction.
“The continued expansion of settlements is an obstacle to peace and negatively impacts efforts to achieve a negotiated two-state solution. We call on the Government of Israel to reverse these decisions,” the foreign ministers of Britain, Australia and Canada said in a joint statement.
Violence has been surging in the West Bank, including deadly clashes in Jenin, attacks on Palestinian villages by rampaging settlers, and rare use of Israeli air power against militants.

HIGHLIGHT

Violence has been surging in the West Bank, including deadly clashes in Jenin.

The sectarian violence in the West Bank has opened up cracks between Israel’s religious-nationalist government and its security chiefs, who recently issued a joint statement calling the settler rampages “nationalist terrorism.”
That raised hackles among Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s far-right allies, who have long played down the scale and impact of the settler rampages. One of them likened the security chiefs’ statement to the recent mutiny by Russia’s mercenary Wagner Group, but soon apologized amid public outcry.
“An apology after the fact does not eliminate the great damage caused,” military chief Lieutenant-General Herzi Halevi said in a speech.
“The IDF operates solely for the security of civilians, hence, its authority.”
“Terrorism and its difficult consequences bring some people to commit acts that are legally and ethically forbidden,” he said.
“An IDF officer who stands by when seeing an Israeli citizen planning to throw a Molotov cocktail at a Palestinian house cannot be an officer.”
Such assurances have had little sway among the Palestinians, almost a decade since the stalling of US-sponsored efforts to achieve their statehood goals through negotiations with Israel. The Palestinian Foreign Ministry has described the settler rampages as “state-sponsored terrorism.”
Israel’s defense minister condemned rampages by groups of Jewish settlers in Palestinian towns and villages in recent days as his top general warned that officers could not stand by and allow attacks which have drawn strong US censure.
Palestinian officials have accused Israel’s military, which is widely deployed in the West Bank, of ignoring or even abetting the rampages.
Of around a dozen suspected rioters detained, at least two are off-duty soldiers, the military said.
With US dual-nationals among the Palestinian victims, Washington — already at loggerheads with Israel over settlement construction — has stepped up condemnation of what it had called “extremist settler violence” and said it expects accountability.
Briefing Israel’s parliament, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant deplored the rampages as “a dangerous social phenomenon that we must fight.”
He described the perpetrators as a “tiny group” made up of fringe settlers and their supporters from inside Israel.
While he noted that suspects were in custody and said West Bank troops had been reinforced as a precaution, Gallant also said Israeli forces would be challenged to “divide their attention” between the riots and Palestinian militant threats.
“There are 500 Palestinian villages, some of them as large as towns. There are tens of thousands of people (Palestinian residents). You can’t protect all of them at once,” he said.
Interdiction of fellow Israelis was hard “because you’re not using surveillance or the implementation of violent (military) operations against them,” he added.