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“This is a provocation because Abu Dis is where the Palestinians have their parliament,” Peace Now activists
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JERUSALEM,
May 29 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Only hours after
adopting the “roadmap” which calls for freezing the settlement
activity on occupied Palestinian lands, the Israeli Housing Minister
prepared a project to build new 12,000 units in the West Bank and Gaza
Strip, an Israeli paper reported Thursday, May 29.
The
Israeli daily Yediot Aharonot said that the Israeli Housing Ministry
“justified the project as a natural growth of the already existing
settlements”. The paper called the move “the settlement
roadmap,” in a clear mocking of the U.S.-backed roadmap for peace
between Israel and the Palestinians.
Israeli
Housing Ministry announced Friday, May 23, it has invited bidders to
construct a new residential district in the largest Jewish settlement
in the West Bank. The plan to build 502 apartments in Maale Adumim
settlement, near (occupied) Jerusalem, is Israel's largest expansion
project for a single settlement announced so far this year.
Under
the roadmap for peace handed to the Israelis and Palestinians on April
30, Israel is required in the first phase to freeze all settlement
building activities on occupied Palestinian lands.
The
Israeli paper, for its part, considered the Israeli government’s
clear “contradiction” as an evidence to the effect that “it (the
Israeli government) applies double standards in dealing with the
future of Palestinian territories”.
Within
the same context, the Jerusalem municipality weighed in to enhance
“the settlement roadmap”. It has submitted a plan to the Israeli
Interior Ministry for a new Jewish settlement near the village of Abu
Dis in Occupied East Jerusalem.
The
new neighborhood would be called Kidmat Tziyon, include 230 housing
units and two synagogues and cover 100 dunams (25 acres) on a hill
overlooking the Palestinian parliament, the municipality spokesman's
office told Agence France-Presse (AFP).
The
new neighborhood would be built on land seized by Israel from Jordan
and annexed in the 1967 Middle East war.
The
land is partly owned by Jewish American millionaire Irving Moskowitz,
who acquired large swathes of land in East Jerusalem in the 1980s and
recently contributed to the controversial development of a Jewish
enclave in the Arab neighborhood of Ras al-Amud.
Peace
Now Protests
Yariv
Oppenheimer, spokesman for the Peace Now movement, condemned the
project which he said was "another attempt at preventing any
solution on the Jerusalem issue by making a return of land to the
Palestinians impossible".
"Moreover,
this is a provocation because Abu Dis is where the Palestinians have
their parliament and has been discussed as a possible capital for a
future Palestinian state," he told AFP.
Israel
Will Never Let Go Of Jerusalem
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"We will never let go of Jerusalem! Never!" Sharon |
In
another development, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon – shortly
before meeting Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmud Abbas – said that
“Israel will never let go of Jerusalem”.
"We
will never let go of Jerusalem! Never!" he warned in a speech for
Jerusalem Day, which commemorates the anniversary of the city's
"reunification" when its Arab eastern sector was seized in
the 1967 Middle East war.
"As
the Prime Minister of Israel, I am true to the honor that has been
given me of being the guardian of Jerusalem, reunified for
eternity," he said. "I will respect this solemn duty without
compromise."
Sharon
was speaking at an annual ceremony held on Ammunition Hill, the last
bastion of the Jordanian defense in the eastern sector and which was
captured by Israeli paratroopers in a fierce battle.
His
comments came just hours before he was due to meet with Abbas in west
Jerusalem to discuss the implementation of the Middle East peace
roadmap, which envisages the creation of a Palestinian state by 2005.
The
ceremony takes place every year on Jerusalem Day in memory of the
Israeli paratroopers who fell in the battle for the east.
Jerusalem
Day celebrations, which began at sundown Wednesday, continued Thursday
with numerous rallies, ceremonies and youth parades, many of them
through east Jerusalem.
On
July 30, 1980, Israel's parliament voted in a law declaring Jerusalem
to be the "unified and eternal capital" of the state of
Israel, but the Palestinians want (occupied) East Jerusalem as the
capital of a future Palestinian state.