Jewish Home leaders vow new settlement will be built

As PM reportedly having seconds thoughts, Bennett and Shaked say promise to evacuated Amona residents will be honored

Defense Ministry dismantling Amona outpost in the central West Bank on February 6, 2017. (Courtesy Amona Council)
Defense Ministry dismantling Amona outpost in the central West Bank on February 6, 2017. (Courtesy Amona Council)

Jewish Home party leaders vowed Friday that Israel will build a new settlement to compensate the evacuated residents of Amona, despite reports that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was having second thoughts.

“Promises need to be kept. The prime minister signed the agreement to establish a new settlement for the residents of Amona,” Education Minister and Jewish Home leader Naftali Bennett tweeted. “I am sure he will stand by his commitments.”

Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked, also from the right-wing party, said “the government is obligated to the agreement signed with the Amona residents and there is no intention to break it.”

“A new settlement for the residents of Amona will be established as we promised,” she wrote on Twitter.

Their comments come after a report Thursday that said that Netanyahu is said to be reconsidering his promise to build the first new settlement in 25 years, following his meeting with US President Donald Trump.

After Trump asked Wednesday that Israel “hold back” on settlement building in the West Bank, Netanyahu decided to reevaluate the commitment to the settlers, who were evacuated earlier this month, Channel 2 reported on Thursday.

Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked, right, arrives at the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem on February 12, 2017. (Emil Salman/POOL)
Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked, right, arrives at the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem on February 12, 2017. (Emil Salman/Pool)

Under an agreement signed with the government ahead of the evacuation, the Amona residents were allowed to pick a new site to rebuild their community — a first state-sanctioned new settlement to be built in decades.

The Prime Minister’s Office did not respond to Channel 2’s request for comment.

The former residents of Amona said that if the reports were true, they would not let the decision pass without protest. “I believe with all my heart that [Netanyahu] won’t back down from the agreement that he signed,” Yossi Dagan, the head of the Samaria Regional Council, told Channel 2.

After the prime minister’s meeting Thursday with US Vice President Mike Pence, a member of Netanyahu’s delegation to Washington said, “We [will] formulate as soon as possible the creation of a mechanism to discuss with the White House construction in the settlements, with the intention of reaching an understanding on this matter.”

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets US Vice President Mike Pence in Washington DC, Feburary 16, 2017, (Avi Ohayun/GPO)
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, meets US Vice President Mike Pence in Washington DC, Feburary 16, 2017. (Avi Ohayun/GPO)

Netanyahu had responded to Trump’s request to rein in settlement activity on Wednesday by promising that Israel and the US would try to coordinate their positions on construction in the West Bank, “so that we don’t bump into each other on this every time.”

Last week the residents of Amona voted to move to the Geulat Tzion unauthorized outpost, located in the Shiloh settlement bloc. While Amona was built on privately owned Palestinian land, Geulat Tzion lies on a state-owned tract.

According to the deal, the new settlement is to be set up within two months.

At the beginning of February, over the course of two days, thousands of police officers streamed to Amona in order to clear out the 42 families and hundreds of protesters who had barricaded themselves inside the homes and a synagogue there, in compliance with a 2014 court decision.

The evacuated residents of Amona were temporarily housed in the nearby Ofra settlement.

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