
Israeli settlement watchdog Peace Now said on Thursday that the government wants to give retroactive approval to four West Bank settlement outposts it had previously pledged to at least partially demolish.
In a written response to a petition Peace Now submitted to Israel’s Supreme Court against the outposts, the state attorney’s office said that settlers had now purchased the private Palestinian land on which they built, paving the way for the government to give its blessing.
“In the response, the government declares its intention to legalise four outposts, in isolated areas,” Peace Now said in a statement, adding that the strategy was an affront to US Secretary of State John Kerry’s efforts to revive dormant Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.
“The intention to legalise outposts as new settlements is no less than a slap in the face of Secretary Kerry’s new peace process,” Peace Now said.
“The... government is indicating it is not committed to peace nor to a two-state solution.”
Givat Assaf, Givat HaRoeh, Maaleh Rehavam and Mitzpe Lachish outposts are among six listed in a 2005 government report as deserving immediate eviction and later ordered shut by a court order. Repeated government appeals have delayed the process.