JERUSALEM: Israel has formally submitted plans for a new settlement neighbourhood in annexed east Jerusalem in what will be the sector's first new district in 14 years, Peace Now said on Friday.

The announcement drew an angry response from the Palestinians, with chief negotiator Saeb Erakat saying it proved the current Israeli government was trying to kill off any chance of a two-state solution.

The new district, Givat HaMatos, will be located on the southern flank of east Jerusalem which lies close to the West Bank town of Bethlehem, in what the settlement watchdog described as the first neighbourhood to be planned since the establishment of Har Homa in 1997.

“Unlike recent plans that caused controversy in Gilo and Pisgat Zeev which expanded the footprint of existing neighbourhoods, the new plan creates an entirely new footprint of a new Israeli neighbourhood in east Jerusalem,” Peace Now said in a statement.

The establishment of Har Homa in 1997, when Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was serving his first term as premier, infuriated the Palestinians who said its construction would complete a ring of Jewish settlements around east Jerusalem, cutting it off from the rest of the West Bank.

The new district will lie on some of the land between Gilo and Har Homa in what the NGO described as “a game changer that significantly changes the possible border between Israel and Palestine.” “The new neighbourhood will complete the isolation between Bethlehem and east Jerusalem, and will destroy any possibility of a territorial solution in Beit Safafa and Shurafat,” the group said, referring to two Arab neighbourhoods.

Speaking to newsmen in Paris, where Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas was meeting French President Nicolas Sarkozy, Erakat said the move “proves the Israeli government wants to destroy the peace process and the two-state solution.

The Middle East Quartet — the European Union, Russia, the United Nations and the United States — is currently pushing for a resumption of peace talks, which the Palestinians say will not happen without a halt to settlement activity.

“We call on the Quartet to quickly take responsibility by condemning Israeli settlement activity and taking measures against these new settlements,” Erakat said.

Plans to build Givat HaMatos were first made public in January 2008 under the government of Ehud Olmert, but they could not be implemented without passing through a lengthy approvals process.

The public now has an eight-week period in which to submit any appeals against the plan to build 2,610 homes, at least two thirds of which — some 1,700 homes — will be for Israeli Jews as the remainder is being built on privately-owned Palestinian land, Peace Now's Hagit Ofran explained.

“We're now in a place where they could start construction within two years,” she said.“It is enough to destroy the possibility of a two-state solution if you build 1,700 homes for Israeli Jews there,” she said.

“This government is eager to build — especially in east Jerusalem.

“When there is so much political backing for promoting it fast, they could get this through and start building within the year.” Israel insists that the whole of Jerusalem is the country's “eternal, indivisible capital” and does not consider construction in the east to be settlement building because the land falls within the city's municipal boundaries, which were drawn up after the eastern sector was occupied in 1967.

Israel's annexation of east Jerusalem was never recognised by the international community or the Palestinians, who want the sector as the capital of their promised state.—AFP

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