Settlers plan 2-day march to J’lem over Ulpana evacuation (JERUSALEM POST) By TOVAH LAZAROFF 06/04/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/DiplomacyAndPolitics/Article.aspx?id=272563
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Right-wing activists plan to set out on a two-day march to Jerusalem
Monday to protest governmental plans to demolish five apartment
buildings in the Ulpana outpost by July 1.
Another 24 activists have embarked on a hunger strike.
The High Court of Justice last month mandated the demolition of the
structures, which house 30 families, because they were built without
permits on private Palestinian property.
Right-wing activists have called on ministers to prevent the
demolition by supporting two bills – by MKs Ya’acov Katz (National
Union) and Zevulun Orlev (Habayit Hayehudi) – that would
retroactively legalize unauthorized West Bank Jewish construction,
such as the Ulpana homes.
Katz and Orlev are bringing their bills to the Knesset plenum
Wednesday for a preliminary reading. But the bills can only pass with
ministerial support.
To date, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has refused to support
legislation and instead spoke with Likud ministers Sunday at their
weekly meeting about a plan to relocate the Ulpana buildings to an
authorized tract of land in the Beit El settlement.
He told the ministers that he was waiting for a response from
Attorney-General Yehuda Weinstein, who he has charged with checking
the legality of the plan.
Weinstein is expected to respond to the prime minister in the next
few days.
Netanyahu also asked him to examine the impact the Ulpana demolition
would have on the ability of left-wing groups, such as Peace Now and
Yesh Din, to continue to use litigation to force the state to
demolish West Bank Jewish homes.
Katz has estimated that there are some 9,000 West Bank Jewish homes
that lack proper permits.
Netanyahu told the ministers that the government wants to both uphold
the rule of law as well as defend and strengthen the settlements.
A relocation plan, he said, would meet both goals and would expand
the Beit El settlement.
Netanyahu said he would support legislation if Weinstein concludes
that legal issues prohibit the relocation of the homes.
The international community is likely to frown on such legislation,
which would transform dozens of outposts into newly recognized legal
settlements.
MK Ze’ev Elkin (Likud), who supports the legislation, told The
Jerusalem Post on Sunday that weeks ago he had a conversation with US
Ambassador Dan Shapiro, who said that Washington would not view such
legislation favorably. The US Embassy could not confirm the
conversation.
An embassy spokesman, however, said that the US has clearly stated
that unilateral actions by both sides, including settlement activity,
does not help the peace process.
Right-wing activists and politicians believe that legislation is the
only option.
They have rejected any plan that calls for the removal of West Bank
Jewish homes.
Some 19 right-wing activists on Sunday joined a hunger strike, which
Amona outpost resident Yehuda Yifrach began last Tuesday to protest
the pending demolition of unauthorized West Bank Jewish homes, such
as the one that he lives in. By Wednesday, there were four hunger
strikers. A fifth joined on Friday.
Last week, Yifrach also pitched a large white protest tent on the
corner plaza next to the High Court of Justice and the Foreign
Ministry in Jerusalem.
On Sunday many activists streamed in and out of the tent, and milled
around outside.
Generators had been set up, along with plastic tables, a refrigerator
and two portable toilets. A number of signs with ministers’ names,
photographs and their positions on outpost legislation were set up
around the tent.
Katz joined the hunger strike Sunday, along with his assistant Harel
Cohen and Binyamin Regional Council head Avi Ro’eh.
Ro’eh has a personal stake in the matter, because the state has
promised the High Court it would demolish the Mitzpe Assaf outpost by
July 1 and Amona by the end of the year. The High Court has also
ordered the state to evacuate the Migron outpost by August 1.
All three outposts are under his jurisdiction. What happens to the
Ulpana homes will have an impact on the homes in those outposts as
well, he said.
“We need to do everything we can to help the prime minister
understand that he cannot do this,” Ro’eh said as he sat on a stone
wall outside the tent.
Legislation resolves the larger-scale issue of unauthorized
construction in Judea and Samaria, Ro’eh said. “It gives an answer
not just for Ulpana but also for Mitzpe Assaf and Amona,” he said.
“We cannot afford to tire.
Even if the sword is at our throat we will do everything that we need
to do,” he said.
Demolition of the Ulpana homes, he said, sets a dangerous precedent.
Dahlia Schwarcz, a mother and a grandmother from Moshav Nehalim near
Petah Tikva, said she took a short vacation from her job so that she
could join the hunger strike.
She said that she had also been an active protester prior to the 2005
Gaza withdrawal.
“I was terribly hurt when Gush Katif [Gaza settlements] were
demolished. I feel a little fraction of what Jews felt in the
Holocaust, such helplessness that it does not matter what you do. I
am here to change that situation,” she said, as she sat on a stone
wall outside the tent, wearing a white Tshirt that identified her as
a hunger striker.
To her right, a number of protesters sat and prayed. A group of
children crowded around the front of the tent and held up signs in
support of legislation. Some of them went out to the intersection
with their signs and chanted, “the nation wants to legislate.”
Gush Etzion Regional Council head Davidi Perl said that physically he
could not join the hunger strike, but that he wanted to show
solidarity with them.
On Sunday he moved his office to the protest site, setting up a side
tent next to the main tent, where he held his meetings.
“We are talking about a battle for all of Judea and Samaria,” he
said, “and for the State of Israel.”
Gil Hoffman contributed to this report. (© 1995-2011, The Jerusalem
Post 06/04/12)
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