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February 24, 1997
Building in Jerusalem - Background
HAR HOMA
1. The planned neighborhood to be built in Har Homa is located
in an unpopulated area near Kibbutz Ramat Rahel, within the
municipal boundaries of the city of Jerusalem.
2. Jerusalem is a vibrant, growing city. The purpose of the Har
Homa project is to alleviate the housing shortage of both the
Jewish and Arab residents of Jerusalem. As such, it constitutes part
of the overall municipal plan to construct 20,000 new housing
units for the Jewish sector and 8,500 for the Arab sector - a ratio
comparable to that of the Jewish and Arab populations in the city.
In this regard, Prime Minister Netanyahu has recently said (Feb.
20):
"We will build in Jerusalem, without conditions, without
restrictions. We will build throughout the city... We are as
committed to the Arab residents of Jerusalem as we are to
providing for the Jewish residents. They, too, need housing, and
we will build, adapting the building plans to the needs of both
populations."
3. The Har Homa project necessitated the appropriation of 1,400
dunams from Jewish landowners and 450 dunams from Arab
landowners. The High Court of Justice upheld the government's
right to appropriate this land in order to meet the housing needs
of the public at large.
ROADS
4. The Ministerial Committee on Jerusalem Affairs decided
(February 18, 1997) to advance the construction of several roads, as
part of the development of the infrastructure of Jerusalem, in
order to reduce traffic congestion in the city and to improve
access routes both to and within the city.
5. The development of such an infrastructure is necessary to serve
the growing needs of Jerusalem as a major city, whose current
population of 500,000 is expected to increase to 800,000 within the
next few years. The resulting improvement in transport will
enhance both the quality of life of Jerusalem's residents and access
from the periphery to the city center.
6. The approved roads in the Jerusalem area are:
a. A new road linking Jerusalem with the coastal plain, which will
serve as an alternative to the existing, already congested road.
b. An eastern ring road linking the Arab population centers to the
north (Ramallah and Nablus) and south (Bethlehem and Hebron) of
Jerusalem. This road will enable those traveling between these
centers to bypass the crowded Jerusalem city center, as is
customary in metropolises throughout the world.
(Map available at: http://www.israel-mfa.gov.il/news/jerroads.html)
LEGAL ASPECTS
7. There is no basis to the Palestinian claims that the planning
construction constitutes a violation of the agreements between
Israel and the Palestinians. These agreements do not place any
restrictions on Israeli building in areas under Israeli control.
8. Both the Declaration of Principles (1993) and the Interim
Agreement (1995) state that the issue of Jerusalem will be discussed
in the framework of the permanent status negotiations, and that
the Palestinian side has no authority in Jerusalem during the
interim period. Under these agreements, the Palestinians have no
standing to demand that Israel coordinate building in Jerusalem
with them.
Source: Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs
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