Israeli High Court freezes controversial outpost legalization law
Published August 17, 2017

Construction beginning on a new Israeli settlement called Amichai, meant for the evacuees of Amona, in Shilo Valley, West Bank, June 20, 2017. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)
JERUSALEM (JTA) — The High Court of Justice froze a controversial law that legalizes certain wildcat West Bank outposts build on private Palestinian land.
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The court’s interim order, issued Thursday, postposed for two months implementation of the Regulation Law. Several Palestinian authorities had challenged the legality of the law. The government has until the end of the freeze to respond.
The law allows the government to expropriate private Palestinian land on which illegal outpost homes have been built. However, the outpost must have been built in good faith or have government support. Palestinian landowners are to be compensated financially or with other land.
Widely condemned by Israeli and foreign activists, the law could allow the government to retroactively legalize some 4,000 illegally built Israeli homes.
Ahead of the final Knesset votes on the law in February, Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit warned it violated Israeli and international law. After the law passed, Mandelblit officially notified the High Court that he would not defend the legislation if it was challenged.
Private attorney Harel Arnon replaced Mandelblit to represent the state on High Court petitions against the law, which was originally meant to save the since-razed outpost of Amona.