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Masri's company plans to start pouring foundations in three months, he said, and says the first residents should move in by 2013. That is, assuming the city gets its access road. Reaching the site now means following a narrow, winding road through a number of Palestinian villages. Planners have laid out a new access road, but about two miles (three kilometers) of it cross an Israeli-controlled zone, said Amir Dajani, Bayti's deputy director. Dajani said the Palestinian Authority has asked Israel to put the stretch of road under Palestinian jurisdiction, but has yet to get a response. "The access road is an artery for the project," Dajani said. "It is critical for its success and future growth and a prerequisite for its sustainability." Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev declined to comment on the project, but said Israel considers economic growth in the West Bank "the best antidote to extremism and terrorism." For now, the project is moving ahead. Last Wednesday, a team of tractors carved a local road into the rocky hillside, while orange-vested surveyors and engineers in hardhats prepared other sites. Standing on the hilltop slated to host the future downtown, site manager Maher Sawalha pointed to where he hopes to build the city's roads, condos and sewage treatment plant. Palestinian villages stood clustered on adjacent hilltops, and the Israeli metropolis of Tel Aviv on the Mediterranean coast was clearly visible, about 25 miles (40 kilometers) to the west. "If it's clear and you have a sunny day, you can see all the way to the sea," Sawalha said. Sawalha, a 45-year-old father of six, said he planned to move from his rented apartment in Ramallah to Rawabi as soon as possible. "It's a dream to own a house here, in a new city where you work and live quietly with your kids," he said. "It will be similar to life in the U.S."
[Associated
Press;
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