Last Updated: Thu Dec 20, 2012 12:28 pm (KSA) 09:28 am (GMT)

Palestinians warn: Israel ‘to be held accountable’ for settlements

An ultra-Orthodox Jewish man walks in Ramat Shlomo, a religious Jewish settlement in an area of the occupied West Bank Israel annexed to Jerusalem, December 18, 2012. (Reuters)
An ultra-Orthodox Jewish man walks in Ramat Shlomo, a religious Jewish settlement in an area of the occupied West Bank Israel annexed to Jerusalem, December 18, 2012. (Reuters)

Israel will be “held accountable” for its settlement building, a senior Palestinian official said on Thursday after Israel pushed forward plans for more than 5,000 new settler homes.

“The settlers and the government of Israel should know they will be held accountable,” presidential spokesman Nabil Abu Rudeina told AFP shortly after Israel reportedly okayed initial plans for a new settlement city in the southern West Bank.

In the West Bank, Israel has approved plans for the construction of more than 500 homes in the southern West Bank in the first step towards creating a new settlement city, a local settler council said Thursday.

“After years, we are happy to announce that the government of Israel has decided to build a city in Gush Etzion,” David Perel, head of the Gush Eztion regional council, told AFP, saying the defense ministry had approved plans for 523 homes in Gevaot.

Perel said the council had presented plans for a city of at least 6,000 homes in the year 2000, but until now, they had never been approved.

“This is a huge achievement,” he said.

According to Hagit Ofran from the Israeli settlement watchdog Peace Now, there are currently only about a dozen caravans at the site, but she said the new city could be home to as many as 25,000 people.

“This is not just another settlement: 6,000 units could house about 25,000 people. Maybe it’s not large as cities go, but in terms of settlements, it’s huge,” she told AFP.

She said the approval meant the initial plans could now be promoted by the Civil Administration's higher planning council, which operates within the defense ministry.

“This sends the message that Israel is not considering the two-state solution. It means it will be much harder to divide the land (in any final peace deal) with another city there,” she said.

The new plans emerged during a week in which Israel has advanced the building of thousands of new settlement homes in east Jerusalem, sparking Palestinian and international condemnation.

Israeli pushed forward with her settlement plans despite U.N., Europe and Russian condemnation.

The United Nations and U.N. Security Council powers on Wednesday condemned Israel’s heightened settler construction in the Palestinian territories as a threat to flagging peace efforts.

U.S. ambassador Susan Rice, however, did not join their public attack on Israel, but slammed the “provocative” act of the United States’ major ally during closed U.N. Security Council consultations.

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