Settlers: On Road to New Palestinian City We’ll Be Moving Targets (JEWISH PRESS) By: Tibbi Singer 03/19/12)
Source: http://www.jewishpress.com/news/breaking-news/settlers-on-road-to-new-palestinian-city-well-be-moving-targets/2012/03/19/
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Some 200 residents of settlements in the Benjamin region, in central
Judea and Samaria, rallied Sunday night on Route 465, in protest of
the new access road being paved to serve Rawabi, the modern urban
center of the planned Palestinian state.
Led by Rosh ha’Moa’atza (County Clerk) Avi Roeh, the Jewish residents
arrived at the work site to demonstrate against connecting the
existing and the new roads. They were joined by Likud activists.
“Rawabi was born in sin,” Itzik Shadmi, chairman of the residents
committee of Benjamin Region, told Ma’ariv. “It was planned
deliberately in a location that would create a contiguous Arab
settlement to serve the additional Arab state in the heart of Eretz
Israel. It also affects environmental quality and Israel’s mountain
aquifer (underground water table).”
The road that will connect the Arab city of Ramallah to Rawabi runs
south to north, and halfway through it crosses highway 465, the cross-
Benjamin highway, the central access road to Ateret and Halamish.in
West Benjamin.
In the future a tunnel will be dug at this junction, to allow
Palestinians to drive under Route 465. But for the time being, the
Ramallah-Rawabi road will connect directly to highway 465, which will
become part of Ramallah-Rawabi for a mile and a half.
A member of the Benjamin residents’ committee explained that the
entry and exit of vehicles to Palestinians from Highway 465 is done
only with road signs and no traffic lights at the junction. “We know
the wild manner of driving of many of the Palestinians,” he
said. “Put them here on the road, and they’ll turn it into a major
traffic artery, with us as moving targets on the highway.”
Jewish settlers fear another security aspect of heavy Palestinian
traffic on the road. “It could be a major Palestinian event, or a
funeral, causing serious traffic jams, and then if an Israeli vehicle
is stuck inside a Palestinian convoy, it could end with very
unpleasant consequences,” the source suggested.
Rawabi (“The Hills” in Arabic) is the first Palestinian planned city
in Judea and Samaria, located near Ramallah and Bir Zeit. The master
plan for the city calls for constructing 10,000 homes in six
neighborhoods with a population of 40,000.
Over the course of two years, before construction began, the
developers bought private property from 2,000 families living in
Canada, Iraq, Spain, Kuwait, Britain, Portugal and Italy. The source
of the city’s water supply is not yet clear, with the most obvious
solution being hooking it up to Mekorot, the Israeli water utility,
via the settlement of Ateret.
The Palestinian website The Electronic Intifada accused Bashar Masri,
the Palestinian businessman and CEO of the company developing
the “Rawabi luxury real estate project in the occupied West Bank,”
of “actively helping Israel deepen its hold on the Palestinian
economy despite his earlier claims that he is trying to help end this
relationship.” This because “a dozen Israeli companies have been
contracted to take part in the construction of Rawabi.” (© 2012
JewishPress. 03/19/12)
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