Israel defies U.S. demands for settlement freeze, approves building of 50 homes in West BankRead more:
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/us_world/2009/06/29/2009-06-29_israel_approves_building_of_homes_in_west_ba.html#ixzz0K2stQbD1&CIsrael’s Defense Ministry said on Monday it had approved construction of 50 new homes at a West Bank settlement as part of a plan for 1,450 housing units, an expansion that defies a U.S. call for a settlement freeze.
News of the planned building work emerged hours before Defence Minister Ehud Barak left for the United States for talks aimed at narrowing a rift with Washington over settlements.
He will meet President Barack Obama’s Middle East envoy, George Mitchell, in New York on Tuesday, Barak’s office said.
An affidavit submitted by the Defense Ministry to the Supreme Court outlined plans to relocate settlers from Migron, an outpost built in the West Bank without Israeli government permission, to the settlement of Adam, north of Jerusalem.
According to the document, a response to a court case brought by the Israeli anti-settlement group Peace Now, a master plan for Adam calls for the construction of 1,450 homes there.
But the ministry said it had given the go-ahead for the construction of only 50 of the dwellings and any additional units would require its separate approval.
Obama has pressed Israel to halt settlement activity as part of a bid to revive peace talks under which the Palestinians would gain statehood.
In a rare dispute between Israel and its main ally, the United States, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has refused to declare a settlement freeze, saying some construction should continue to match population growth within the enclaves.
Peace Now said some 2,500 settlement homes are currently under construction in the West Bank.
In the West Bank city of Ramallah, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas reiterated his refusal to resume negotiations with Israel until it froze settlement.
"We won’t accept the continuation of settlements," he said.
Abbas also urged Netanyahu to drop his conditions for the creation of a Palestinian state, which include international guarantees it would have no army and a demand the Palestinians recognise Israel as a Jewish state.
"Israel should accept the two-state vision and not put conditions that would render the issue meaningless," Abbas said, echoing comments he made through a spokesman after a Netanyahu policy address on June 14.
To further complicate matters, Abbas' Fatah group accused rival Hamas of arresting dozens of Fatah activists in the Gaza Strip.
The recriminations threaten to derail Egyptian-mediated efforts to reconcile the two Palestinian groups.
Barak left open the possibility of a limited, temporary halt to construction in settlements in comments he made on Sunday in response to an Israeli newspaper report that he would propose a three-month moratorium.
Barak has also spoken of couching a Palestinian deal within a wider Israeli-Arab peace accord.
A goal of the Israeli-U.S. negotiations is "advancing a process for a comprehensive regional settlement in the Middle East," Barak’s office quoted him as saying in a statement.