T. Belman. That may be but it is a far cry from what it was 6 years ago and what it should be today.
The CBS releases it’s quarterly report as the United Nations Human Rights Council is set to vote on a resolution condemning Jewish building over the pre-1967 lines.
Housing starts in the J&S settlements spiked by 26 percent in 2015 when compared to the previous year, according to the Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS).
The CBS released it’s quarterly report on Wednesday as the United Nations Human Rights Council is set to vote Thursday on a resolution condemning Jewish building over the pre-1967 lines, calling on Israel to halt such activity.
The CBS data was part of an overall report that showed that starts rose by 3.9% and the finishes fell by 2.8%. But finishes in the settlements went up by 25%.
In real numbers, ground was broken for 1,913 new settler homes in 2015 compared with 1,516 such units in 2014.
Similarly, work on 2,033 new homes was finished in 2015 compared to 1,615 that were completed in the previous year.
Right wing politicians have complained in the last year about a de-facto freeze in buildings within the West Bank settlement blocs.
The CBS does not break down its data by settlement but it does provide statistics on the five largest Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria: Modi’n Illit, Beitar Illit, Ma’aleh Adumim, Givat Ze’ev and Ariel.
Historically, building in those five settlements has often made up over 50% of all such West Bank Jewish building but since Netanyahu entered office in 2009, construction in those five communities has dropped.
CBS data showed, however, that the spike in building last year was due in large part to increased construction in those five communities which made up 48% of the starts and 55% of the finishes.
The city of Ariel, which has typically lagged behind when it comes to building, had the highest number of finishes in 2015 with 566 completed new homes, followed by 181 finishes in the city of Ma’aleh Adumim.
The largest number of starts was in Ma’aleh Adumim where ground was broken for 246 new homes, followed by 216 such units in Ariel.
The CBS data was limited to Judea and Samaria and did not include Jewish building in east Jerusalem.
Building growth a start. Population growth at 4 -5% per annum.
Which of these countries is morally qualified to judge Israel?
conversation used to revolve around the freeze in YS and now the struggle is reduced to conversation about the freeze in the ghetto.
LOL, all kept within, or adjacent to the euro designated ghetto boundaries of the major settlement blocks with the vast proportion of YS untouched by Jews. Lots of figures which obfuscate the fact that the Jewish homeland in YS is being maintained JEW FREE for a future scenario. As long as the Jews stay in their ghetto they can build, but voices are also raised even for that because the Jews need to feel they are fighting for the crumbs they get. Notice, it is many years since anyone spoke of new developments outside the ghetto in YS. Disappeared from all conversation, replaced by the struggle for Jerusalem… because YS has already been decided.