Sarah Kreimer is associate director of Ir Amim, an Israeli NGO
dedicated to creating a more equitable Jerusalem and reaching an
agreed-upon political future for the city (including a progressive Zionist agenda). She visited Meretz
USA a few years ago, and our Israel Symposium has often included very
informative tours of East Jerusalem, sponsored by Ir Amim. The following
is from Kreimer's op-ed in today's Haaretz, "East Jerusalem construction scuttling two-state solution":
".... Givat Hamatos is the first new Jewish neighborhood to be built over the
Green Line in East Jerusalem since Har Homa in 1997. Har Homa, which
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu initiated during his first term as a
kind of 'price tag' for Israel’s withdrawal from parts of Hebron, has
embroiled Israel in international controversy ever since. Is Givat
Hamatos Netanyahu’s 'price tag' for the Palestinian decision to apply
for UN membership?
"What’s clear is that Givat Hamatos is the keystone of a plan that
quietly, piece by piece, with no Israeli public debate, is unilaterally
sealing the southern border of annexed East Jerusalem with Israeli
construction. In the last year, plans for building more than 5,000 homes
in this southern area have been approved or advanced − 2,000 to expand
Gilo toward Wallajeh and Beit Jala, almost 1,000 to expand Har Homa
toward Beit Sahur, and now more than 2,000 units to link Har Homa with
Gilo. These plans are presented under many guises − as an answer to the
social protest, as an expression of Israel’s right to build in its
capital. But never is the Israeli public allowed to see the full
picture: that, despite its rhetoric, the Israeli government is working
on the ground to scuttle a two-state solution.
"Taken together, these expansion plans in southern East Jerusalem wreak
havoc with the one set of principles agreed upon by most Israeli and
Palestinian negotiators (including former prime ministers Ehud Olmert
and Ehud Barak) − the 'Clinton Parameters.' Under these guidelines,
Gilo would have been recognized as Israeli − swapped for a commensurate
piece of land from within the Green Line − and the rest of the land on
Jerusalem’s southern borders would become part of a Palestinian capital.
Thus, through this construction, we are ... foreclosing on
the option of a two-state solution. For, without an agreement on
Jerusalem’s borders, there will be no Palestinian-Israeli peace. ..."
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