Erekat slams e. J'lem housing approval as 'disrespectful'

PLO negotiator says decision to approve 930 new Har Homa apartments makes clear Israel's intention to "turn occupation into effective annexation."

Erekat talking with hands in air 311 (photo credit: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)
Erekat talking with hands in air 311
(photo credit: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)
Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat on Friday slammed the Interior Ministry's decision to approve 930 new apartments in east Jerusalem. He said the decision "makes clear its [Israel] intention to turn this occupation into effective annexation."
"This is a flagrant display of disrespect and disdain to the international community, which has repeatedly condemned Israeli settlement construction as an illegal obstacle to peace," Erekat said in a statement.
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Two years after it was first deposited for approval, the Interior Ministry’s Jerusalem District Planning and Building Committee on Thursday gave its final approval for Har Homa C, which is to be located on a hill adjacent to the existing Har Homa neighborhood in the capital’s southeast.
In a nod to the tent-city housing protesters, Interior Minister Eli Yishai said that 20 percent of the new apartments will be small ones destined to be more affordable for young couples. He added that he had instructed his office to promote projects that had a mix of large and small apartments, to address the lack of affordable housing.
“We are continuing to build in Jerusalem and in all of Israel,” Yishai said in a statement.
“The lack of real estate is severe and we will not stop projects.”
The Har Homa C project has come up for discussion a number of times in the past year, including twice in the spring, though each time it was delayed for political reasons.
It was delayed when Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu visited London, and then again when President Shimon Peres met with President Barack Obama in Washington.
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