Settler group reports surge in population in Judea and Samaria

Figures from West Bank Jewish Population group: Jewish population in settlements grew 3.3% in 2018, compared to Israel’s overall population growth of 1.9% • Settlers praise policies of Trump administration • PA: US support for settlements doomed to fail.

Associated Press and Israel Hayom Staff

A new housing project is underway in the settlement Naale, near Modiin 

The number of people living in Israeli settlements surged at a much faster rate than the overall Israeli population last year and predicted even more rapid growth, the West Bank Jewish Population Stats group reported Tuesday.

Director Baruch Gordon said the current U.S. administration has created a much friendlier environment for the settlers, clearing the way for a surge in construction in the coming years.

“It’s just simply opened up. There’s no longer this cloud looming over it,” Gordon said.

Gordon’s project conducts an annual study of official population data obtained from the Interior Ministry. The report is sponsored by Bet El Institutions, a prominent settler organization.

The latest data shows the population in Jewish settlements in Judea and Samaria grew to 449,508 as of Jan. 1, up 3.3% from 435,159 people a year earlier.

In comparison, Israel’s overall population grew 1.9% last year to 8.907 million people, according to the Central Bureau of Statistics.

The Interior Ministry was not immediately able to confirm the figures but said it had been in touch with Gordon’s group and that the numbers appeared authentic.

The data showed robust growth in settlements across the board, from large towns located near Israeli population centers to isolated communities deep inside Judea and Samaria.

Gordon cited several reasons for the rapid growth. An estimated two-thirds of the settler population are religious Jews, who tend to have larger families. In addition, he said the cheap costs of housing have lured many young families that cannot afford homes in Israel proper.

But he also said the Trump administration’s attitude toward the settlements is also having an effect.

Former U.S. President Barack Obama, like a string of Republican and Democratic predecessors, put heavy pressure on Israel to halt construction.

Trump, in contrast, has done little to stop construction. While urging restraint at times, the White House has otherwise remained quiet as Israel has pressed forward with numerous developments.

This, in effect, has given Israel a green light to lay the groundwork for a surge in construction that should materialize over the next year or two, Gordon said.

“Since the change of the U.S. administration, the atmosphere for construction permits has become much easier. They’re being given with greater ease,” he said.

“I think possibly the next report and certainly in the ones after that, I think we’ll start to see a huge surge in the numbers here,” he added.

The figures did not include data for east Jerusalem, where well over 200,000 Israeli Jews now live.

Nabil Abu Rudeineh, spokesman for Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, called the growth in the settler population a “direct result” of U.S. policy.

“The American support for settlements through silence is doomed to failure because there is no peace and stability without an agreement with the Palestinian people and its legitimate leadership,” he said.

A U.S. Embassy official said Trump has made his position on settlements “clear” and has received Israeli pledges to take his concerns into consideration.

“The administration is firmly committed to pursuing a comprehensive peace between Israelis and Palestinians,” the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity under diplomatic protocol.

The left-wing group Peace Now, which opposes the settlements, said the data in Tuesday’s report seemed “logical,” citing the Israeli government’s policy “to encourage construction and relocation to the West Bank.”

Peace Now said the Trump effect “cannot be seen at this time” because of the lag time between approval of permits and actual construction.

February 6, 2019 | 2 Comments »

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  1. @ adamdalgliesh:
    The only way to put a stop to the idiocy of not treating Ariel or any of the Jewish Towns just like any other place in Israel is to apply Israeli Civil Law (sovereignty) to all of Area C. It is also the way to give to teeth to stopping illegal building by Arabs.

    Doing this is important and the sooner the better.

  2. The Attorney General’s office has cancelled plans for Medical School at Ariel University, which is located in Samaria, even though the school was set to open in the fall of this year, funding had already been provided, and 70 students already admitted for the fall semester. In order to do this, the AGs deputies ruled that a vote of Israel’s Council of Higher Education, which had voted to approve the medical school, was invalid. THey then dismissed dismissed two members of the board, claiming they had “conflicts of interests,” and ordered the “shrunken” board, no reducted to five members, to hold a “re-vote” on funding the Medical School. Not surprisingly, the five remaining members of the purged board voted 3 to 2 to cancel funding for the school.

    This outrageous lawless act of lawyers’ tyranny was obviously designed to discourage the growth of the “settlements,” and to prevent them from becoming an integral part of Israel. But the lawyer-tyrants also deeply hurt Israel as a whole, which badly needs new, Israel-trained doctors, and of course dashed the hopes of the 70 students who had already been admitted. Outrageous, contemptible, lawless, and blatently political. Down with the lawyers’ oligarchy! Reempower the Knesset, the political leadership, and the Israeli electorate!

    The story in Times of Israel:

    In reversal, state body says settlement university cannot build medical school
    After conflict of interest necessitates re-vote, Council for Higher Education puts kibosh on Ariel University med school; Bennett vows to fight decision by ‘cartel’

    By Jacob Magid 7 February 2019, 4:07 pm
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    American businessman and investor Sheldon Adelson (sitting R), his wife Miriam with President Reuven Rivlin (standing middle) and Education Minister Naftali Bennett (L) at the ceremony for a medical school at Ariel University in the West Bank, on August 19, 2018. (Ben Dori/Flash90)
    American businessman and investor Sheldon Adelson (sitting R), his wife Miriam with President Reuven Rivlin (standing middle) and Education Minister Naftali Bennett (L) at the ceremony for a medical school at Ariel University in the West Bank, on August 19, 2018. (Ben Dori/Flash90)
    An internal committee of the Council for Higher Education voted Thursday to reverse its decision to establish a medical school at a university in the West Bank settlement of Ariel.

    Earlier this week, the Attorney General’s Office ordered that the budgeting committee hold a re-vote, after two of its members who supported the project were deemed to have been in a conflict of interest.

    The updated decision is seen as a significant blow to Education Minister Naftali Bennett, who had boasted the establishment of the settlement medical school as one of his most significant accomplishments in the role.

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    In a Thursday statement, the New Right co-chairman called it “unbelievable” how the council “was placing sticks in the wheels of the establishment of a new medical school at Ariel.” He called the council, which is under his ministry and and made up of representatives from the country’s other universities, an “academic cartel.”

    “Israel is crying out for doctors, and all they’re doing is preventing this!” Bennett said, adding that he had reached out to Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit and that additional steps would soon follow.

    Education Minister Naftali Bennett speaks at the ceremony for a new Faculty of Medicine at Ariel University in the West Bank, on August 19, 2018. (Ben Dori/Flash90)
    The medical school had been seen as a significant boost in the standing of Ariel University, which fought for years to be recognized as a university because of its location in the West Bank.

    The medical school has been heavily funded by the school’s US-based billionaire financiers, Miriam and Sheldon Adelson, who were honored at a ceremony in August marking the inauguration of the new program, which had been slated to welcome its first class of 70 future doctors next fall.

    The school has faced a boycott from various academics abroad and its professors have even lamented discrimination by other universities within Israel, who they claim refuse to recognize its legitimacy due to its location in the West Bank.

    Bennett at the August ceremony compared the establishment of the medical school to “pulling teeth,” accusing the council of trying to block the move.

    In December, the Haaretz daily revealed that one of the members of the council’s budgeting committee, Dr. Rivka Wadmany-Shauman, had voted in favor of establishing the medical school at the same time that the university was considering hiring her for a teaching position.

    The report led deputy attorneys general Dina Zilber and Raz Nizri to freeze the July decision, in which the committee had voted 4-2 in favor of the opening of the medical school.

    On Monday, the deputy AGs ordered a re-vote, but barred the participation of Wadmany-Shauman as well as fellow committee member Zvi Hauser, who is running for Knesset as a candidate on the Israel Resilience party’s slate.

    The shrunken panel voted 3-2 to reverse its decision to approve the medical school.

    The Ariel University Center campus (photo credit: CC-BY Michael Jacobson/Wikipedia)
    Ariel University in the West Bank (CC-BY Michael Jacobson/Wikipedia)
    With Thursday’s decision, it will be up to Mandelblit to decide whether the budgeting committee’s decision is binding or whether it is merely a recommendation to be taken into consideration by the Council for Higher Education in Judea and Samaria, which is slated to be dissolved into the council in eight days.

    Bennett was instrumental in the Knesset’s passing of legislation in February that places Israeli colleges and universities in the West Bank on par with institutions located inside Israel proper and under the auspices of the council. It meant the abolition of the Council for Higher Education in Judea and Samaria, which had been tasked with supervising Israeli universities in the West Bank.

    It would have been the sixth such program in Israel.