Following Israel Hayom report, US condemns move to allow return to Homesh
"We have been clear that advancing settlements is an obstacle to peace and the achievement of a two-state solution," embassy says after it emerged that Defense Minister Gallant was poised to implement controversial measure from March.
Entry to Homesh, as well as three other former settlements in northern Samaria, was previously illegal under the 2005 Gaza Disengagement Law, which was repealed by the Knesset in mid-March. However, Israelis have returned occasionally, and a new yeshiva was established in the area.
This week, Gallant essentially put in motion the process that will make the repeal of the law and its restrictions final. As Israel Hayom reported Thursday, Gallant has instructed the IDF GOC Central Command Yehuda Fuchs to sign a decree that will make it legal for Israelis to set foot there, although this was not akin to having the settlement re-established, as this would require more administrative measures.
In its condemnation on Thursday, the US reiterated its strong rebuke of the repeal of the law that was passed. "As we said in March, the United States is deeply troubled by efforts to rescind important parts of the 2005 disengagement law, including the prohibition on establishing settlements in the northern West Bank. At least one of the outposts in this area, Homesh, was illegally built on private Palestinian land," it said.
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