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Israeli right, settlers seethe over settlement ease

Hardline settlers have been hurling invective at US President Barack Obama's administration for pressing Netanyahu to take the decision.
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) Nov 29, 2009
Settlers and members of Israel's ruling rightwing party were seething on Sunday over a government decision to impose a temporary ease on West Bank settlement building after months of US pressure.

"I am completely opposed to" the ease in settlements, Environment Minister Gilad Erdan, a member of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party, said ahead of the weekly cabinet meeting.

"As most Likud members, I am guessing that this measure will not get the Palestinians to the negotiating table," he told reporters.

The settler lobby, a potent political force in Israel, is vigorously opposed to any curbs on Jewish settlement activity on occupied Palestinian land and along with several Likud members has slammed last week's announcement.

Netanyahu announced on Wednesday that his government would impose a 10-month moratorium on issuing building permits for new homes in the occupied West Bank in a gesture aimed at getting the Palestinians to resume peace talks.

The negotiations were suspended during the Gaza war at the turn of the year.

The moratorium, however, excluded occupied and annexed east Jerusalem as well as the construction of public buildings in the West Bank. It also allows for completion of hundreds of units already under way.

The Palestinians, who have demanded a complete freeze on all settlement activity before the US-backed peace talks resume, have rejected Netanyahu's move as political.

On Sunday, Israel's defence ministry announced it would be expanding the number of inspectors charged with enforcing the government's decision.

"Today there are 14 inspectors to oversee construction in Judea and Samaria (the biblical name of the West Bank) ... Within two weeks, an additional 40 inspectors will be recruited and trained," the ministry said.

"They will later be joined by dozens of others to ensure the application of the partial freeze of settlements decided upon by the Israeli security cabinet," it said, adding that police and border guards would also be involved.

Meanwhile, hardline settlers have been hurling invective at US President Barack Obama's administration for pressing Netanyahu to take the decision.

At a gathering late on Saturday organised by a Likud hardliner, the mayor of the West Bank settlement of Beit Aryeh said the administration posed a threat to believers in Eretz Israel (Greater Israel), the idea that Israel should have biblical-era borders.

"He hates the Jews and is an anti-Semite," Avi Naim charged, in remarks that were widely broadcast on Sunday on Israeli radio and in newspapers.

"His regime is the worst with which Eretz Israel has ever been confronted, and I tell Barack Hussein Obama that he will not be able to stop us," the mayor said, in reference to the US president's Muslim father.

"We will survive Obama," he added.

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