Global General

Israel halts east Jerusalem building

(Agencies)
Updated: 2010-04-27 06:37
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Another city councilman, Meir Turujamen, who sits on the Interior Ministry committee that gives final approval to building plans, said his panel has not met since the Biden visit. It used to meet weekly, he said.

"I wrote a letter about three weeks or a month ago asking (Interior Minister Eli) Yishai why the committee isn't convening," he said. "To this day I haven't received an answer."

Interior Ministry spokeswoman Efrat Orbach insisted any delays were nothing more than a bureaucratic matter.

The prime minister's spokesman, Mark Regev, said only that "following the Biden visit and the mishap, the prime minister asked that a mechanism be put in place to prevent a recurrence of this kind of debacle." He would not elaborate.

In Washington, State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley wouldn't discuss what Israel was telling the United States about Jewish construction.

"We have asked both sides to take steps to rebuild trust and to create momentum so that we can see advances" in peace talks, Crowley told reporters. "We're not going to go into details about what we've asked them to do, but obviously this is an important issue in the atmosphere to see the advancement of peace."

Netanyahu repeatedly has insisted that Israel has a right to build anywhere in the city's eastern sector, which Palestinians hope to make their future capital, and acknowledging any slowdown would have huge political risks. Netanyahu's coalition is dominated by hard-liners who oppose any division of Jerusalem.

Netanyahu met with members of his Likud Party on Monday and denied any freeze was in place, said Danny Danon, a lawmaker who attended the session.

"If we see there is a freeze, we will not sit quietly and the prime minister knows that," Danon said. "This coalition will not allow the prime minister to freeze building in Jerusalem."

Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said he has not heard anything official about an Israeli construction freeze in east Jerusalem. "What counts for us is what we'll be seeing on the ground," he said.

Still, any de facto freeze could make it easier for the Palestinians to participate in US-mediated peace talks. The Palestinians have refused to hold direct negotiations with Netanyahu unless he halts all settlement construction in the West Bank and east Jerusalem.

Attempts to advance construction haven't stopped altogether: A lower-level municipal committee gave preliminary approval last week to a synagogue and kindergarten in a Jewish neighborhood in east Jerusalem, Turujamen said. The decision still needs Interior Ministry approval.

The freeze does not affect construction that is already under way, or hundreds of apartments where approval has already been granted. However, an engineer who oversees residential construction in a Jewish neighborhood in east Jerusalem said proposals to build hundreds of apartments have been held up in recent weeks. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he did not want to jeopardize his business ties with the city.

Israel captured east Jerusalem, the site of sacred shrines holy to Jews, Muslims and Christians, in the 1967 Middle East war and immediately annexed it. Some 180,000 Israelis now live in Jewish neighborhoods built there in the past four decades, and about 2,000 more live in the heart of traditionally Arab neighborhoods.

The Palestinians, the US and the rest of the international community do not recognize the annexation and regard the neighborhoods as no different from the settlements Israel built in the West Bank.

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