News from Peace Now:
Yesterday, January 31, 2017 the Prime Minister and Minister of Defense issued an announcement on the promotion
of 3,000 housing units in the settlements. The announcement was issued late last night, possibly under the
assumption that all international attention will be directed towards the Amona evacuation.
The announcement is not an official step and is likely to be followed by concrete actions in the coming days in the
shape of publications of tenders and promotion of plans.
--Yedioth columnist Aviad Kleinberg writes that US President Donald Trump may be bad for Israel.
***UPDATE: The final language of the bill has been significantly broadened, and now applies to “Any person who is not a citizen of Israel or holds a certification for permanent residency in the state of Israel shall not be given a residing certification or permit of any kind, if he, or the organization or agency for the sake of which he acts (she-hu po’el avuram), has knowingly published a public call to boycott the State of Israel, as defined in the Law to Prevent Harming the State of Israel through Boycott of 2011, or if he has committed to take part in such a boycott, as stated.”***
***UPDATE: The Knesset passed the "Entry Bill" into law on March 6, 2017***
APN's statement condemning passage of the law is here.
What is the “Entry Law”?
The so-called “Entry Law” currently under consideration is an amendment to Israel’s 1952 “Entry Law,” which determines who is allowed to enter into Israel and under what conditions.
The amendment stipulates that any person who is not an Israeli citizen will be denied entry into Israel if:
“if the person, or the organization or agency for the sake of which he acts, has knowingly publicized a call to boycott the state of Israel, as defined in the 2011 Law to Prevent Harming the State of Israel through Boycott, or (if that person) has pledged to participate in such a boycott.”[while granting Israel’s Interior Minister the prerogative to issue exceptional entry permits to boycotters “for special reasons.”]
APN's Lara Friedman in The Hill: January 27, 2017
"David Friedman is the wrong choice for US ambassador to Israel"
The nomination of David Friedman to be the next ambassador of the United States to Israel has stirred a fierce
debate, focused primarily on Friedman’s well-documented bombastic rhetoric and his views on settlements, the
occupation, and the Palestinians — views that are at odds with decades of bipartisan U.S. policy.
As the Senate gets ready to consider Friedman’s nomination, what has been largely overlooked is the fact that,
based on his own very clear and public record, Friedman is by any objective standard disqualified from serving as
America’s diplomatic envoy to any country, and especially to Israel. Continue Reading...
I24 News: January 26, 2017
“No action after closed door UN Talks on Israeli Settlement Construction,” Peace Now says
that Netanyahu is taking advantage of Trump’s recent election as President of the United States to appeal to
Israel’s right-wing settler population.
The Jerusalem Post: January 26, 2017
“Peace Now: Israel Begins to Act On 73% of the 2,500 Settler Homes,” Following the Housing
Ministry’s approval of tenders for new housing units in the West Bank, Peace Now urges Netanyahu “to take
responsibility for the future of Israel by halting settlement construction and assuring the future of Israel as
both Jewish and democratic.”
Haaretz: January 24, 2017
“Israel Approves Construction and Planning of 2,500 Settler Homes in West Bank,” Peace Now
speculates that by approving construction of new settlement homes, Netanyahu is trying to appease the right in
response to their criticism of his actions during Operation Protective Edge.
The Times of Israel: January 24, 2017
“PA: Trump Encouraged Israel to Okay 2,500 Settlement Homes,” Americans for Peace Now says
that the construction of 2,500 new settler homes may be the largest number approved since 2013.
VICE News: January 24, 2017
“Israel Just Approved Construction of 2,500 Settlements in the West Bank,” Ori Nir,
spokesperson for Americans for Peace Now, warns that moving the American embassy to Jerusalem would have
“destabilizing repercussions in the region.”
Yossi Alpher is an independent security analyst. He is the former director of the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv University, a former senior official with the Mossad, and a former IDF intelligence officer. Views and positions expressed here are those of the writer, and do not necessarily represent APN's views and policy positions.
This week, Alpher discusses issue areas where President Trump’s provocative agenda touches on Israel; the motives behind PM Netanyahu's tweet that said the wall Israel built along its border with Egypt is a good model for the wall Trump wants to build, at Mexican expense, along the US-Mexico border; Israel's decision to absorb 100 Syrian refugee children at a time when Trump’s executive order bans entry into the US of refugees and visa holders from Syria; the Iran factor; the settlements issue; and Netanyahu's chances of beating all of the accusations raised against him and remaining in power.
--Chief Rabbi of Mexico, Shlomo Tawil, wrote in a letter to Israeli Interior Minister Arieh Deri in response to Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu's Tweet message that US President Donald Trump's plan to build a wall on the Mexican border is a "great idea."
--Haaretz's Asher Schechter writes about Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu's Twitter message expressing support for US President Donald Trump's plan to build a wall on the Mexican border.*
Americans for Peace Now (APN) is appalled at Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's expression of support for President Trump's immigration policies. APN calls on Netanyahu to stay out of America's heated debate on immigration, and to take into consideration the impact that statements on issues like this have on Israel's relations with broad, key segments of the American public and with the vast majority of American Jews.
-- Said Yakub Abu al-Kiyan's brother-in-law, Salim, who heard Yakub’s horn honking nonstop during the incident that night in Um al-Hiran village, during which Border Police shot and killed Yakub while he drove his car, which ran over and killed one of the policemen. The horn may have sounded when he fell onto the steering wheel, wounded, or maybe he blew it deliberately, wrote Haaretz reporter Gideon Levy, who visited and interviewed his family.