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"We have no intention of building new settlements or of expropriating additional land for existing settlements," Netanyahu said in a major policy speech last week. "But there is a need to enable the residents to live normal lives, to allow mothers and fathers to raise their children like families elsewhere." Netanyahu pointedly dropped the politically charged "natural growth" phrase for "normal lives." But the linguistic slight of hand doesn't mask the fact that migration
-- and not just the growth of families -- is a major factor in settler population growth. Migration from Israel and abroad accounted for 5,300 of the 14,500 new settlers in 2007, the last year for which bureau data are available. And 2007 wasn't a random blip. Migration accounted for between a third and half of the population growth in each year between 1999 and 2007, save 2005, when numbers were skewed by Israel's withdrawal of 8,500 settlers from the Gaza Strip. Nearly 300,000 Israelis currently live in the West Bank and 180,000 in east Jerusalem, whose annexation by Israel in 1967 is not internationally recognized. That's more than double from 116,300 at the end of 1993, the year Israel and the Palestinians signed their landmark accord. Between 2006 and 2008 -- roughly the tenure of the previous government -- Israel completed building 5,503 apartments in the West Bank and began building 5,125, the statistics bureau said.
Maaleh Adumim, home to more than 35,000 settlers, continues to be one of the biggest magnets for migrants. At the settlement's northeastern edge, overlooking the Judean desert, rumbling front-end loaders were busy scooping up mounds of dirt and stones at a new neighborhood that has been going up for the past 2 1/2 years. Bricks, steel rods and coils of rubber tubing were piled up outside the unfinished homes, which Palestinian laborers were building. Yossi Navon, the foreman who spoke of the Embassy personnel, said apartments were going for about half of what a comparable apartment in Jerusalem would fetch. "I think Bibi said it right," Navon said, referring to Netanyahu by his nickname. "Natural growth has to continue."
[Associated
Press;
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