Settler advocates say “silent freeze” in place

Ben Sales

(JTA) — Israeli Deputy Defense Minister Danny Danon says that a “silent freeze” has been placed on West Bank settlement expansion, though activist group Peace Now disputes the claim.

Danon, a Likud Knesset member who advocates Israeli annexation of much of the West Bank, told the Times of Israel that no new tenders have been approved in recent months for building in Israeli West Bank settlements.

“I don’t know of a formal policy to limit building,” Danon told Times of Israel Monday. “But when you look, de facto, what’s happening on the ground, yes, you feel there is a silent freeze in terms of planning and in terms of government construction.”

Dani Dayan, chief foreign envoy of the Yesha Council, a settlement advocacy group, claimed that the committee to approve new building in the settlements had not met for three months, though previously approved construction is ongoing.

Previously approved tenders for new settlement housing were republished at the end of April.

According to Hagit Ofran, settlement watch project director for Peace Now, which opposes settlements, the new building committee had met within the past three months. She called talk of a freeze “premature.”

“Not enough time has passed since the last time new tenders were published,” she told The Times of Israel.

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