Residents of Jerusalem neighborhood to house US Embassy ask Supreme Court to block security changes
Published April 9, 2018
JERUSALEM (JTA) — A group of Israelis who live near the site of what next month is slated to become the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem has asked the country’s Supreme Court to block the security changes the United States deems necessary.
The residents of the Arnona neighborhood in southern Jerusalem have complained that a planned 13-foot-high stone security wall will obscure their view to the east, and that a planned escape road is digging up a picturesque hillside.
The residents already have had to deal with security patrols and bright security lights around the current building, which serves as the U.S. Consulate.
The residents are angry that the changes are being made without consulting with them, Hadashot News reported on Monday.
Israel’s National Council for Planning and Construction last month waived the usual rezoning approval and construction permits for the work in turning the U.S. Consulate in Jerusalem into the American embassy.
Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon signed off on the official zoning and permit waiver for the building. “As we promised, we won’t let unnecessary bureaucracy delay the move of the American embassy to Jerusalem, Israel’s eternal capital,” he said at the time in a statement. Kahlon called the leniency “a strategic diplomatic move” for the country.
The waiver is valid for three years. The area’s current zoning would not have allowed the wall or the escape road.
The left-wing NGO Ir Amim has joined the residents in their petition to the Supreme Court. “Ir Amim would praise the opening of an American Embassy in Jerusalem if a parallel embassy would have opened in the capital of a Palestinian state in al-Quds,” or Jerusalem, attorney Oshrat Maimon, director of policy development for Ir Amim, told Hadashot News. She called the move as it is currently constituted “a destructive, strong-arming and unilateral step.”
U.S. Ambassador David Friedman and some staff will begin working out of the consular section beginning in May, JTA previously reported. In the second phase, by the end of 2019, an annex on site will be constructed for a more permanent working space for the ambassador, staff and a classified processing site. The third phase, the site selection and construction of a new embassy, will take up to nine years.