Following protests in front of his house, the prime minister agrees to an urban building plan for Itamar the West Bank.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu this week approved an urban development plan for Itamar settlement in the West Bank’s Shomron Regional Council, one week after a protest tent opposite his house was dismantled.

The decision retroactively approves buildings that are already standing in Itamar and further grants permits for the construction of schools, kindergartens and other public institutions.

Approval has been issued for settlement buildings already in place. (Photo: EPA)
Approval has been issued for settlement buildings already in place. (Photo: EPA)

 

Itamar has become a symbol for many settlers, following the massacre of the Fogel family in 2011. Immediately following the murders, many demanded the approval of an urban development plan for the settlement.

Settlers claimed that the gap in security arrangements for the settlement caused by the lack of approval for a building plan led to the massacre not being prevented.

The approval was one of the central goals of Yossi Dagan, the head of the Shomron Regional Council. Dagan established the protest tent outside Netanyahu’s house after the murder of Naama and Eitam Henkin a few weeks ago.

It is understood that the approval does not allow for additional homes to be built, but rather only buildings that will serve the residential houses that are already in place.

While waiting for the approval, children in Itamar were unable to attend school in a fixed location. The Ministry of Finance only recently provided funds to the Shomron Regional Council for the building of a day care center, but because the urban development plan had not yet been approved, the building never became active.

“Small approvals such as these are a mockery and do nothing for settlements,” the Yesha Council, which represents numerous municipal councils, said regarding the decision.

“We are talking about plans that include new neighborhoods and expansion of settlements, but in practice they are reduced to plans that only include what has already been built, with no approval for new housing units,” the council added.

“Approvals that only deal with existing buildings are also only given after a delay and offer nothing new. This building freeze is by design and the halt in construction is the current government’s biggest failure.”

As reported by Ynetnews