No one was surprised when Erekat’s complaint was quickly echoed by the UN Secretary General. "The United Nations' position on the illegality of settlements is well known," Secretary General Ban said. "The Americans must pressure the Israeli government to stop settlement activities."
The real surprise came when U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice joined the chorus and expressed her opposition. She told a news conference and Israel’s Foreign Minister Livni, "We're in a time when the goal is to build maximum confidence between the parties and this doesn't help to build confidence. There should not be anything which might prejudge final-status negotiations," Rice said. "It's even more important now that we are on the eve of the beginning of the negotiations.“ One British newspaper described her comments as, “delivering what for the Bush administration is rare criticism of Israel over its settlements policy.”
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November 2010 -- President Obama and his spokesmen decried a new Israeli announcement of plans to build more homes in Har Homa.
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The de-legitimization of Jerusalem’s new (post-1967) neighborhoods and the diplomatic attack on their expansion appear to have begun anew. The last time we saw such an assault was in 2000, and it was accompanied by deadly gunfire, as well.
During the first two years of the Intifada, more than 400 shooting attacks were unleashed on the Jerusalem neighborhood of Gilo and its 40,000 residents from the nearby Arab town of Beit Jala. Although the town was predominantly Christian, Beit Jala was infiltrated by Fatah’s Tanzim gunmen who shot at Gilo, hoping for Israeli retaliation against the local residents. Gilo residents began to evacuate. Belatedly the Israeli government provided cement barriers and bullet-proof glass to protect the Jerusalem neighborhood’s residents.
Ignoring the fact that the neighborhood consisted of major apartment complexes, schools and shopping centers, much of the world press condoned the attacks on the “Israeli settlement,” as if it were some temporary military camp. The British press was quick to claim that Gilo was “illegal under international law.” [See The Guardian’s Suzanne Goldenberg .] Reuters’ correspondent Christine Hauser tried to show that it was the Arab town of Beit Jala under Israeli attack by describing the piles of brass bullet shells collected by the Palestinian locals, not realizing that spent casings are found at the source of the shooting, not the target. The media distortion was so great that in 2001 CNN issued a memorandum to its staff stating that "We refer to Gilo as a 'Jewish neighborhood on the outskirts of Jerusalem'... We don't refer to it as a settlement."
Har Homa, established in 1997, is another Jewish neighborhood on Jerusalem’s southern flanks. With an estimated
See more history of Har Homa here.