State wants to change unauthorized outpost policy (JERUSALEM POST) By TOVAH LAZAROFF 04/29/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/DiplomacyAndPolitics/Article.aspx?id=267865
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The state is looking to change its policy mandating the blanket
removal of unauthorized Jewish structures on private Palestinian
property in the West Bank, the attorney-general told the High Court
of Justice on Friday.
The government still prioritizes dealing with this issue, the state
said, but each case cannot be viewed through the same narrow lens.
Decisions regarding the outposts must be made also from a global
perspective that take into account the policy impact on other such
cases, the state said.
Not all instances of unauthorized construction on private Palestinian
property are alike, the state said, and the impact of home
demolitions in a certain region, must also be taken into account, it
added.
In light of this pending policy shift, the state on Friday asked the
court to release it from its pledge to remove 30 such homes in the
Ulpana outpost by Tuesday, which are constructed on land the state
classified as belonging to private Palestinians.
The state had made that pledge last year in response to a 2008
petition Yesh Din filed on behalf of the property owners.
On Friday the state told the court that it planned to submit a new
government policy within 90 days regarding unauthorized construction
in the West Bank, including with respect to Jewish homes on private
Palestinian property.
It further asked the court to re-open the case regarding the Ulpana
homes and to reexamine it based on that new policy. It also noted
that it was concerned by some factual discrepancies that had been
presented to the court with respect to the Ulpana homes.
At present, the state said, the High Court deals with petitions with
respect to unauthorized West Bank construction on a case-by-case
basis, even though a decision in one case has implications on others.
The issue of the Ulpana, the state said, is a good example of an
individual case with broad based implications for other outposts and
homes in settlements built on private Palestinian property.
The state said that this case would impact similar pledges it made to
the court to remove homes in the outposts of Givat Assaf by July 1
and in Amona by the end of this year. According to the state, these
homes were also constructed on private Palestinian property.
Separately, the state noted that the High Court of Justice has also
ordered the removal of all the structures in the Migron outpost by
August 1.
The state said the Ulpana homes, built on the outskirts of Beit El,
were not the only instances in that settlement of construction on
private Palestinian property.
At the same time that it debated the Ulpana case, the court also
examined a Yesh Din case regarding unfinished construction in the
Beit El settlement on private Palestinian property, the state said.
Earlier this month the state asked for a delay in the planned
demolition date of those structures to allow for the authorization of
a zoning plan for that area of the settlement.
In March a meeting on the issue was held with representatives of the
Prime Minister’s Office, the Justice Ministry, the Civil
Administration and settler leaders. The Civil Administration
explained that outside of these two areas, there were other homes in
Beit El, in some cases structures from the 1980s, which were built
without property authorization on private Palestinian land.
Similar situations exist in other West Bank settlements, the state
said.
On Sunday, the High Court of Justice is expected to hold a hearing
with respect to the state’s request earlier this month to delay the
demolition of unfinished homes in Beit El. (© 1995-2011, The
Jerusalem Post 04/29/12)
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