Friday, November 2, 2012

Bound Netanyahu government secret agreement

new Israeli government led by 
Benjamin Netanyahu as one
manifestation of the overall 
Israeli racism.
ISRAEL - Israel's new Prime Minister does not seem interested in a peaceful solution with the Palestinians and will lead the government to the expansion of Jewish settlements instead of peace concessions, analysts believe.

"Nothing is going to happen," Akiva Eldar, a columnist Hareetz, owned Israel, said on Thursday, 1 November.

"Netanyahu has no desire to continue what the previous government did."

Netanyahu on Wednesday mornings start his first day in office, hours after he was sworn in at midnight.

The analysts believe that Netanyahu will be the same as what everyone predicted when he was dealing with the peace process.

Netanyahu has never supported the establishment of a Palestinian state, a principle which Israel agreed to under the road map (road map) International.

Head of the Likud Party, who began the Oslo autonomy agreements during his first period as prime minister 1996-1999, said the economy had improved in the West Bank before negotiations discussing other issues.

Delivering the message before the Knesset before the six-hour debate on the new government, Netanyahu has not made specific decisions about the establishment of a Palestinian state the actual demand backed by the United States and other parties included in mediation between Israel and the Palestinians.

Palestinian officials describe the speech Netanyahu "not encouraging".

"The U.S. government should press Netanyahu to remain stuck to the fundamentals of the peace process," said Nabil Abu Rudeina, spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

But experts worry that the pressure is not an effective way for the new administration.

"Not anyone can pressure Israel to do something," Efraim Inbar, a professor of political science at Bar-Ilan Universit, said the New York Times.

The international community wants peace talks with the Palestinians back on the halt in November 2009.

The European Union last week warned of "consequences" if the new Israeli government is not committed to a two-state solution.

Pro Expansion of Settlements

Furthermore, the experts stressed that the new government will conduct settlement expansion in the occupied areas.

"The new government clearly wanted the expansion of settlements," Samir Awad, a political science professor at Bir Zeit University in the West Bank dii, told Reuters.

"This is to" expand the road blocks, and end Palestinian state construction projects. "

Palestinian president gave the same opinion.

"Binyamin Netanyahu never believed in the two-state solution or to sign the agreement and do not want to stop settlement expansion activities. Was clear," Abbas told the official Palestinian news agency.

Netanyahu's coalition is dominated by the right-wing and religious parties who desire widely spread of Jewish settlements on Palestinian land.

Israel army radio last week revealed that Netanyahu had tied a secret deal with the ultra-nationalist party Yisrael Beiteinu, one of the coalition partners, pledging to expand the high-scale occupation of the West Bank area.

According to the plan, about 3,000 housing units will be built in an area called E1 in the West Bank and East Jerusalem settlements incorporating Maale Adumim.

The international community thinks all of the Israeli occupation of Palestine is illegal.

Since 1967, Israel has built more than specifically Jewish settlements in the West Bank, claimed more than 40 percent of the area and occupied by as many as half a million people.

Most of the inhabitants are grouped according to the "ideology", who believe that the West Bank is "Holy Land of Israel" which should not be given to anyone even for a lasting peace with the Palestinians.

Most of the settlers are classified as "ideological settlers," who believe that the West Bank is the "Biblical Land of Israel" which must never be given up even in return for a lasting peace with the Palestinians.


Source:  Reuters

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