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UN chief Ban Ki-moon sharply criticised a decision by Israel to advance plans to build hundreds of units in the West Bank and East Jerusalem just days after world powers called on Israel to stop its settlement policy, his spokesman said yesterday.
“This raises legitimate questions about Israel’s long-term intentions, which are compounded by continuing statements of some Israeli ministers calling for the annexation of the West Bank,” Ban’s spokesman Stephane Dujarric said in a statement.
Ban was “deeply disappointed” that Israel’s announcement followed the release of a report on Friday by the “Quartet” sponsoring the stalled Middle East peace process -- the United States, Russia, the European Union and the United Nations.
The long-awaited report said Israel should stop building settlements, denying Palestinian development and designating land for exclusive Israeli use that Palestinians seek for a future state.
The Palestinians want an independent state in the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem, areas Israel captured in a 1967 war.
The last round of peace talks broke down in April 2014 and Israeli-Palestinian violence has surged in recent months. The Quartet report said at least 570,000 Israelis are living in the settlements.
Ban “reiterates that settlements are illegal under international law and urges the Government of Israel to halt and reverse such decisions in the interest of peace and a just final status agreement,” Dujarric said.
Diplomats said the Quartet report was not as hard-hitting as expected after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu set out to ensure the document was softened.
Meanwhile, an Israeli juvenile court sentenced a 15-year-old Palestinian boy to 14 months in prison yesterday for planning a knife attack against Israelis, a court statement said.
The boy, whose name was withheld as a minor, had climbed over a security fence from the West Bank into Israel in December with a 12-cm kitchen knife hidden under his shirt, southern Israel’s Beersheba Juvenile Court said in its ruling.
The court handed the boy an additional conditional jail sentence of 12 months if he commits a similar offence in the next three years.
Prosecutors had asked for a sentence of 18 months in jail, while the defence argued for seven months that the boy had already served since his December 4 arrest.
The ruling said the boy had confessed to planning the attack and regretted his decision soon after he climbed over the fence into Israel.
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