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Palestinians building new neighborhood inside Jerusalem

The luxury apartments to be built in "Lana," as it will be called, are earmarked for affluent Palestinian families.

by  Ariel Kahana and Daniel Siryoti
Published on  10-13-2021 09:38
Last modified: 10-13-2021 11:21
Palestinian business leader hopes UAE, Bahrain will press Israel on settlementsReuters/Rami Ayyub

Bashar Masri, the founder of Rawabi, the first planned Palestinian city in the West Bank | File photo: Reuters/Rami Ayyub

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After Rawabi, the first planned Palestinian city built in the West Bank, the Palestinians are now in the process of building a new Jerusalem neighborhood: "Lana."

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The plan is to build the future Palestinian neighborhood north of Jerusalem, near Beit Hanina. The neighborhood, whose construction will commence in the coming months, according to Palestinian reports, will consist of thousands of housing units that will only add to the congestion in the city.

Massar International, a holding company headquartered in Ramallah, is spearheading the planning for "Lana" and its construction. The company, which is owned by the Masri family, amassed its fortune by supplying and transporting oil and fuel. Massar International also planned and built Rawabi.

The official launch of the initiative took place several days ago in east Jerusalem, attended by senior Palestinian officials. Bashar Masri, the chairman of Massar International, said at the event that similar to Rawabi, the new neighborhood will be built for Palestinians of high socio-economic status.

According to the blueprints, parts of the neighborhood will be built within Jerusalem's municipal grounds, and the initial approvals from city hall have already been granted.

Jerusalem's Planning Infrastructure Administration approved the project in 2019, whose first stage is 92 housing units. On September 2, another construction permit was granted to allow the Palestinians to immediately begin breaking ground. In the later stages, according to the construction plans, 400 homes will be built within Jerusalem's municipal territory.

Religious Zionist Party leader Bezalel Smotrich (Yehonatan Shaul/File) Yehonatan Shaul

The project's managers said at the launch that the luxury apartments to be built in Lana are meant to answer the needs of affluent Jerusalem families.

"All Arab construction between Ramallah and Jerusalem will harm the city's unity," said Maor Tzemach, chairman of the Lach, Yerushalayim ("For You, Jersualem") organization. "Israel must 'put the brakes on the Palestinian Authority's delusional dreams in Jerusalem, and approve, right now, the construction of the Jewish neighborhood in Atarot. This is the only way we can put an end to the Palestinian dream of 'greater al-Quds.'"

Jerusalem councilman Yonatan Yosef said: "As a member of the Planning Infrastructure Administration, I'm stunned that people who describe themselves as Zionist work against the holy city. I will work with all my might to thwart the dangerous plan to the future of a Jewish majority in Jerusalem."

Chaim Silberstein, the founder and president of the "Im Eshkachech" (Keep Jerusalem) organization, said, "The construction permit granted to Masri to build dozens of housing units and his aim of expanding the permit to include hundreds of additional units next to the Atarot industrial zone is a death blow to the effort to expand the industrial zone on behalf of all the city's residents."

Religious Zionist Party leader Bezalel Smotrich lambasted the decision to allow the construction, tweeting, "This is what dividing Jerusalem looks like. Bennett is dividing Jerusalem."

Fellow party member Ofir Sofer slammed the decision, saying, "This is Bennett's voice, and [Foreign Minister Yair] Lapid and [Health Minister Nitzan] Horowitz's doing. The dangerous diplomatic process is here."

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Tags: IsraelJerusalemPalestiniansRawabi

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