LIKUD PARTY CALLS FOR DE-FACTO ANNEXATION OF ISRAELI SETTLEMENTS
Israel - Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party
unanimously urged legislators in a non-binding resolution on Sunday to
effectively annex Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, land that
Palestinians want for a future state.
By enacting civilian law over settlements, the move could streamline procedures
for their construction and expansion. That land is currently under military
jurisdiction and Israel’s defense minister has a final say on building there.
The settlers are subject to Israeli civilian law.
“We will now promote the recognition of our sovereignty of the Jewish
settlements in Judea and Samaria (the West Bank). ... We must begin to enact
this sovereignty, we have the moral right and obligation towards our settler
brothers,” Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan told a meeting of Likud’s
Central Committee.
Netanyahu is not bound to follow the resolution. He did not attend the
meeting, which attracted several hundred delegates including ministers,
legislators and party officials. The Likud Central Committee is the party’s
governing body.
At least two previous Likud Central Committee decisions have been
ignored by party leaders:
In 2002, it voted against the creation of a Palestinian state, but
then-Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said he would act as he saw fit and Netanyahu
in 2009 voiced conditional support for the establishment of a Palestinian state
in a landmark speech.
Political commentators said the decision might bolster right-wing
support for Netanyahu, who could seek a public mandate in an early election as
he awaits possible criminal indictments against him on corruption suspicions.
He denies wrongdoing.
Although parliamentary elections are not due until November 2019, the
police investigations in two cases of alleged corruption against Netanyahu and
tensions among partners in his governing coalition could hasten a poll.
Most countries view settlements that Israel has built on land captured
in the 1967 Middle East war as illegal. Israel disputes that and cites
biblical, historical and political links to the West Bank, as well as security
interests.
About 400,000 settlers and 2.8 million Palestinians live in the West
Bank. The Palestinians want to establish a state in the West Bank and Gaza
Strip with East Jerusalem as its capital.
In 1981, Israel enacted civilian law on the Golan Heights, territory
captured from Syria in 1967, a de-facto annexation of the strategic plateau.
The move has not won international recognition.
Israeli settlements have been one of the main stumbling blocks in
Israeli-Palestinian peace talks that have been frozen since 2014. Efforts by
U.S. President Donald Trump’s envoys to restart them have not yet shown any
progress. Trump this month recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, reversing
decades of U.S. policy.
SOURCE : REUTERS
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