About Us

IMRA
IMRA
IMRA

 

Subscribe

Search


...................................................................................................................................................


Monday, May 3, 2010
187,000 e. J'lem Jewish homes planned

187,000 e. J'lem Jewish homes planned
By ABE SELIG The Jerusalem Post 03/05/2010 06:53
www.jpost.com/Israel/Article.aspx?id=174541

Israel Land Fund group intends to expand Jewish e. J'lem.

Despite immense international pressure to halt Jewish construction in east
Jerusalem and in all areas over the Green Line, Israel Land Fund founder
Aryeh King on Sunday presented a plan that would see nearly 200,000 new
housing units created there.

Speaking at a conference at the Menachem Begin Heritage Center to discuss
future development initiatives in the capital, King described a plan that
would use privately owned land and property belonging to the Jewish National
Fund to provide roughly 187,000 new homes in east Jerusalem, E-1 (between
Jerusalem and Ma’aleh Adumim) and a chain of territory extending from
Ramallah to Bethlehem.

“If Jerusalem doesn’t expand, and expand eastward, it will become the Gaza
Strip,” King said.

Using a blown-up map of the city and its surrounding areas, King showed the
audience where hundreds of dunams of land outside the northern Pisgat Ze’ev
neighborhood could contain roughly 12,000 new housing units.

Around the southern Gilo neighborhood, King said, "there is enough similar
land to build 60,000 units."

“There are 800 dunams [80 hectares] in E-1, owned by a wealthy, Jewish
philanthropist, that could prove room enough for 100,000 housing units,”
King said. “The potential is enormous.”

King’s vision faces a number of obstacles, among them the area’s large
Palestinian population, who claim the territory for a future Palestinian
state.

While King stressed that much of the land was “empty and unused” property,
redrawing Jerusalem’s municipal boundaries to include such areas would
drastically affect the city’s demographics, though he didn’t seem perturbed.

“I’m ready and willing to bring 200,000 [additional] Arabs into [a wider
municipal boundary of] Jerusalem,” King told the audience. “As long as there
are 800,000 Jews that come with them.”

Another problem is the current freeze on Jewish housing starts in Judea and
Samaria, and the de facto building freeze in east Jerusalem, which the city’s
politicians have been hard-pressed to acknowledge over recent weeks.

Ever since the approval of 1,600 new housing units in Ramat Shlomo was
announced during US Vice President Joe Biden’s visit in March, sparking a
diplomatic row with Washington over construction even within Jerusalem, all
government bodies dealing with such building plans have either refrained
from meeting or addressed only minor projects.

While King’s plan allows for some leeway in this area, as much of the
property in question is privately owned and within the Jerusalem municipal
boundaries – any projects outside those boundaries and over the Green Line
would need Defense Ministry approval.

“The state will eventually have to become involved,” King acknowledged on
Sunday. “But the fact remains, Jerusalem must grow, and these are prime
areas for it to grow into.”

Search For An Article

....................................................................................................

Contact Us

POB 982 Kfar Sava
Tel 972-9-7604719
Fax 972-3-7255730
email:imra@netvision.net.il IMRA is now also on Twitter
http://twitter.com/IMRA_UPDATES

image004.jpg (8687 bytes)