Netanyahu vows new settlement even as illegal one is demolished

Israeli prime minister says expansion into West Bank will happen ‘as soon as possible’

Israeli police evicts settlers from  Amona, the largest of about 100 unauthorised outposts erected in the West Bank without formal permission but with tacit Israeli government support. Photograph: AP Photo/Oded Balilty
Israeli police evicts settlers from Amona, the largest of about 100 unauthorised outposts erected in the West Bank without formal permission but with tacit Israeli government support. Photograph: AP Photo/Oded Balilty

Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu has vowed to establish the first new West Bank settlement in more than two decades "as soon as possible" to make up for the demolition of an illegal settler outpost.

Mr Netanyahu’s announcement was his latest step to expand Israeli settlement construction in the wake of US president Donald Trump’s inauguration. Mr Trump has signalled a far softer line toward the settlements, which are considered illegal by most of the international community.

Mr Netanyahu made the comments just as Israeli security forces were completing the evacuation of Amona, where they broke into a synagogue earlier on Thursday to remove 200 protesters who had barricaded themselves inside.

The pro-settler government of Mr Netanyahu had unsuccessfully tried to block the evacuation of Amona. Israel’s supreme court rejected all appeals after determining the outpost was built illegally two decades ago on private Palestinian land.

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Speaking at a ceremony in the West Bank settlement of Ariel, Mr Netanyahu expressed “great pain” over the removal of Amona.

“We all understand the depth of the pain and therefore we will establish a new settlement on state land,” he said. “Already yesterday, I formed a team that will determine the settlement location and get everything ready. We will act so that it happens as soon as possible.”

Unauthorised outposts

According to the Israeli anti-settlement watchdog Peace Now, Israel has not officially broken ground on a new settlement since 1992. Since then, however, it has greatly expanded its existing settlements and allowed dozens of unauthorised outposts to sprout up, in some case subsequently legalising them.

In all, some 400,000 Israelis now live in West Bank settlements, in addition to 200,000 others living in east Jerusalem.

The Palestinians claim both areas, captured by Israel in the 1967 Six-Day War, as parts of a future independent state. And the international community has opposed the settlements, built on occupied lands sought by the Palestinians, as obstacles to peace.

On Thursday, Israeli police completed the evacuation of the wind-swept Amona community, where hundreds of Jewish activists joined residents in resisting the pullout. The evacuation began on Wednesday, but about 200 activists remained holed up in the synagogue.

On Thursday, several hundred Israeli forces surrounded the building and officers wearing goggles and wielding plastic shields broke through the doors and sprayed water to push back defiant protesters.

“The officers faced especially tough and violent resistance,” police said in a statement. Protesters sprayed fire extinguishers at police and threw rocks, paint bottles and wooden planks, police said.

AP