Thursday, April 03, 2008

Hareidi MKs Pressure Olmert To Allow New Housing in Beitar Illit

Hillel Fendel
Strong pressure from the hareidi-religious Knesset members has led Prime Minister Olmert to announce an end to a construction freeze in Beitar Illit. On the other hand, two startup Jewish neighborhoods in Judea and Samaria were destroyed on Wednesday.Though Prime Minister Olmert has promised not to allow new construction in Judea and Samaria, he changed his mind this week in the face of strong pressure from the Shas and United Torah Judaism (UTJ) parties. Opposition party UTJ goaded its fellow hareidi party, coalition member Shas, to use its leverage to demand a solution to the housing crisis in Beitar Illit.

MK Yaakov Litzman (UTJ) said, "If Shas threatens to vote against the government in the [next] no-confidence motion, I guarantee you that within five minutes, Olmert will cave in and allow new construction." Members of UTJ also promised that they would not replace Shas in the coalition if Shas quits.

Beitar Illit is a hareidi city in Yesha, west of Gush Etzion. The government had earlier decided to stop marketing 800 apartments there, causing a severe housing crunch for the constantly growing city in which young hareidi couples in the Jerusalem area have come to rely on for affordable housing.

In the event, Shas did threaten to abstain in the vote - and sure enough, Olmert informed Shas spiritual leader on Monday that his ban did not include Beitar Illit. There were reports that Rabbi Yosef had even phoned Olmert to reprimand him for stopping the construction there.

Two Outpost Neighborhoods Destroyed - But Rebuilding Has Begun
In other Yesha news, two budding Jewish neighborhoods in Yesha - commonly known as unauthorized outposts - were destroyed today (Wednesday). One of them is Harchivi (meaning "Expand forth," based on Isaiah 54: "Expand the place of thy tent…for thou shalt break forth both right and left"), a part of Elon Moreh, and the other is Shvut Ami ("the return of My nation"), just outside Kedumim.

In Harchivi this morning, residents dismantled a wooden synagogue after having been tipped off as to the impending arrival of large Border Guard and police forces. They did this in order to prevent the permanent destruction of the wooden walls and floors. When the forces arrived, there was nothing left for them to destroy, and so they engaged in burying the rubble of past attempts to build Harchivi. A resident of Elon Moreh told Arutz-7, "This is not the first time. They have nothing to do, so they use their bulldozer to keep smoothing over the dirt and evening it out - making it easier for us to rebuild here on what is usually a hilly area."

At Shvut Ami, nationalist camp pioneers arrived in the afternoon once again to rebuild what the army had torn down. A large group of left-wingers and Arabs greeted them, and a confrontation appeared to be in the making. As of early evening, however, the Arabs and leftists had left without provoking violence, while the religious youth remained.

Growth in Ariel, Jerusalem, and Tene-Omarim
On the other hand, Prime Minister Olmert also recently approved the construction of 48 new apartments in the city of Ariel, Haaretz reported, while Jerusalem Mayor Uri Lupoliansky approved this week 600 new housing units in the northern Jerusalem suburb of Pisgat Ze'ev. In addition, Defense Minister Ehud Barak enabled the transport of five new caravans (trailer homes) to Tene-Omarim, in southern Judea. The caravans are to be used to house evicted Gush Katif families, Barak said.
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