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Israeli authorities approve new West Bank settlements — group

All Zionist settlements are considered illegal by most states

By AFP - Jan 17,2021 - Last updated at Jan 17,2021

A Palestinian protester assists a youth reacting to tear gas, amid confrontations with Israeli forces in the village of Kfar Qaddum near the Jewish settlement of Qadumim (Kedumim) in the occupied West Bank, during a demonstration against the expropriation of land by Israel, on Friday (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Israel on Sunday advanced plans for 780 new settlements in the occupied West Bank, settlement watchdog Peace Now said, adding the move puts Israel "on a collision course" with the incoming US administration.

Right-wing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had last week directed authorities to approve construction of the units in occupied Palestinian territories.

That came less than two weeks before President Donald Trump's pro-settler administration was due to leave office.

All settlements in the West Bank are regarded as illegal by much of the international community.

But Trump's administration, breaking with decades of US policy, declared in 2019 that Washington no longer considered settlements as being in breach of international law.

US President-elect Joe Biden, who will be sworn on Wednesday, has indicated that his administration will restore Washington's pre-Trump policy of opposing settlement expansion.

Peace Now, an Israeli civil society group that opposes the occupation, said that Israeli planning authorities had approved "plans to build 780 units in settlements, most of them deep in the West Bank".

"Not only will this settlement activity erode the possibility for a conflict-ending resolution with the Palestinians in the long-term, but in the short-term it needlessly sets Israel on a collision course with the incoming Biden administration," the group said.

Beyond the change in Washington, experts say Netanyahu also has domestic political reasons for pushing settlement expansion.

Electioneering is intensifying ahead of Israel's March 23 poll, in which Netanyahu is expected to face a fierce right-wing challenge from Gideon Saar, a defector from the premier's Likud Party.

Saar, a prominent pro-settler voice, split with Likud late last year to challenge Netanyahu, Israel's longest serving premier.

"Prime Minister Netanyahu is once again putting his personal political interests over those of the country," Peace Now said.

Israel has occupied the West Bank since the 1967 June War.

Following years of settlement expansion, there currently some 450,000 Jews living in the West Bank amid an estimated 2.8 million Palestinians.

Governments worldwide largely see settlements as an obstacle to a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

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