OCCUPIED
JERUSALEM, August 23 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Israel has
allowed construction of 530 new settler houses in the West Bank as
Washington signaled it would accept growth in Jewish settlements in the
occupied Palestinian territory, political sources said Monday, August
23.
A
report in Monday's Yediot Aharonot daily said more than
530 new houses would be built in settlements including Haradar and
Har-Gilo lying close to occupied Jerusalem and the West Bank town of
Bethlehem after adjoining land had been "rezoned".
The
announcement comes after it emerged that Washington had given its tacit
approval for expansion of existing Jewish settlements allegedly to
accommodate "natural growth", in apparent contradiction of the
US-backed roadmap peace plan which calls for a freeze on all settlement
activity.
Yediot
reported that a total of 2,167 construction permits for West Bank houses
had been issued this year even though only 908 houses were put on the
market last year.
It
means that the number of homes constructed in the West Bank this year
will account for 12 percent of the total even though only 3.6 percent of
the Israeli population live there.
Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon last week approved the construction of around
1,000 new homes in four of the largest of the West Bank settlements in a
move which was widely interpreted as a bid to placate opponents of his
plan to pull troops and settlers out of the Gaza Strip.
The
international community considers all Israeli settlement in the occupied
territories to be illegal.
Infuriated
Palestinians
and Arabs reacted with anger to the fresh Israeli project. Palestinian
Prime Minister Ahmed Qorei accused Israel of escalating tensions, saying
the move would wreck the roadmap peace plan.
"While
it is talking about evacuating settlements in Gaza, it is expanding all
settlements in the West Bank," Qorei was quoted by press reports as
saying.
"This
will not bring about stability nor will it bring peace."
Palestinians,
who fear uprooting the Gaza settlers is a cover for strengthening
Israel's hold on bigger West Bank lands, said the United States was
tearing up its own peace "road map" -- a blueprint for a
Palestinian state.
"For
the United States to take such positions ... can only damage the peace
process, if it exists, and damage the whole situation and make it more
difficult," Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa told reporters
in Cairo.
According
to the internationally-backed roadmap plan, Israel is obliged to halt
all settlement activities in the occupied Palestinian territories where
around 245,000 Jewish settlers live.
The
roadmap has made no progress since it was launched last year amid
accusations by the Palestinians that the Israelis are blatantly
violating their commitment to freeze settlement activity.
While
backing the roadmap, US President George W. Bush has claimed that the
size of some of the largest settlements meant it was
"unrealistic" to expect Israel to withdraw totally from the
West Bank in any final settlement. The statements had drawn outrage
across the world.
"Any
agreement or green light for enlarging or expanding the settlements is
an act that not only does not serve but is a total departure from the
peace process," Qorei said.
Illegal
In
the past, Washington has objected to all settlement construction.
The
Palestinians have said the shift threatens prospects for peace and
demanded a clarification from Washington, according to Reuters on
Monday.
They
object to all settlements in the West Bank and Gaza, where they hope to
establish an independent state.
Israel
occupied the areas in the 1967 Mideast war. The Jewish settlers live in
Jewish settlements, the vast majority of them in the West Bank.
Anti-American
Sentiments
The
US support for the Israeli settlement expansion are to increase
anti-American sentiments among Arabs in general and Palestinians in
particular.
A
senior US administration official, commenting on Israel's plan to build
1,000 more settler homes, said on Saturday: "There is some
flexibility there."
While
the White House denied any official change in the US stance, an official
said efforts were under way to clarify with the Israelis what
"settlement activity" means, Reuters said.
Based
on this new understanding, officials said Washington could agree to new
construction provided it did not take place outside the boundaries of
existing settlements.
This
could mean that all plans to leave settlements are thus under wraps with
new units are being built there.
Hundreds
of thousands of Palestinian fled their homes or were forced out of them
on the creation of Israel.
Their
descendants now make up a Palestinian refugee community of some five
million in the West Bank, Gaza and abroad who have kept alive the dream
of reclaiming homes in what is now Israel under any peace accord.
Those
who stayed in their villages when Israel was created on Palestinian
lands are now described as Israeli Arabs.
Israel
rejects the "right of return" and wants refugees resettled in
a future Palestinian state.
Palestinians
and Israeli Arabs commemorate Naqba Day, or Catastrophe day, on May 15 -
the official date of Israel's creation according to the western
calendar.
Casualties
In
events on the ground, a 21-year-old Palestinian man was killed by
Israeli gunfire in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip.
Hazem
Abu Zuri was hit in the chest after Israeli troops moved into the area,
medical sources said.
His
death takes to 4,246 the number of people killed in the Palestinian
Intifadah against Israeli occupation since September 2000, including
3,248 Palestinians and 927 Israelis.