Watchdog says Israel 'legalizes' another settler outpost

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Israel's settlement watchdog on Monday accused the government of quietly legalizing an unauthorized settlement outpost in the Jordan Valley in a move likely to spark international criticism.

Peace Now said the defense ministry had granted tacit approval to a wildcat outpost called Givat Salit at the northern tip of the Jordan Valley.

"In the past month, the ministry of defense authorized the illegal outpost of Givat Salit despite Israel's commitments in the roadmap to evacuate it," a statement from the group said.

Under terms of the US-backed roadmap, which was launched by the Middle East Quartet of ‘peacemaking’ diplomats in June 2003, Israel committed to remove all unauthorized outposts set up since March 2001.
COGAT, the defense ministry unit responsible for all civilian affairs in the West Bank, was not immediately available to confirm or deny the report.

"The government wished to avoid issuing an official decision legalizing the outpost because it could have led to international criticism. The authorization was not announced publicly, and was uncovered by Peace Now," it said.

Israel differentiates between "legal" settlements and "illegal" outposts set up without government permission, but the international community views all settlement on occupied territory as a violation of international law.

Givat Salit was established in September 2001 and is now home to 14 families, the NGO said.

Peace Now said Givat Salit was legalized by redesignating it as a neighborhood of the nearby Mechola settlement, despite the fact that a major inter-city highway ran between the two.

It said the ministry had used the same method in February to confer legal status on another outpost called Shvut Rachel, which was redesignated as a "neighborhood" of the nearby settlement of Shilo.

And two months later, Israel sparked international ire by conferring legal status on another three outposts -- Bruchin, Rechelim and Sansana -- adding their number to the existing 120 official settlements dotted across the occupied West Bank which are home to more than 342,000 people.

Peace Now says there are more than 100 "illegal" outposts which were set up by various Israeli governments since the 1990s in an unofficial and illegal manner.

PHOTO CAPTION

A man walks next to his camels in the Jordan Valley near the border between the Israeli-controlled Palestinian West Bank and Jordan (background) in 2011.

Al-Jazeera

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