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Shvut Rachel and Shilo, which also won retroactive approval for some 100 apartments last week, have spawned five more nearby outposts. Settlers operate vineyards on 3,000 acres that produce more than 50,000 bottles of wine a year, as well as an olive press that produces 12 percent of Israel's domestic olive oil, said New York-born Yisrael Medad, a Shilo resident. "We love the land and we build here, and after that we get formalization," the 65-year-old said during a tour of the area Tuesday. In Shvut Rachel and the area's five other unsanctioned enclaves, the government has lent a hand, even while withholding formal approval. The Housing Ministry under settler patron Ariel Sharon, later Israel's prime minister, built 68 homes in Shvut Rachel just months after it was established, even though it lacked permits, said Moshe Levi, the acting mayor. The government also provided water, electricity and other services, just as it does for other unauthorized settler enclaves set up since the late 1990s in response to calls by Sharon for settlers to seize the hilltops. Israel's Defense Ministry denied last week's decision means an outpost has been legalized. It described Shvut Rachel as a neighborhood of Shilo, home to about 300 families. The two communities are about a half-mile (kilometer) apart, on neighboring hilltops separated by a valley. "This is not an isolated outpost. This is a neighborhood of Shilo," a Defense Ministry spokesman said of Shvut Rachel, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with briefing regulations. Shvut Rachel is part of Shilo's municipal boundaries, Medad said. However, a 2005 government-commissioned report classified Shvut Rachel as an outpost
-- as it has with other unauthorized enclaves, even if they were set up within the municipal boundaries of a mother settlement. Moshe Levi said Shilo and Shvut Rachel have separate budgets and administrations. Talia Sasson, an Israeli lawyer who wrote the 2005 report on outposts, said she was concerned the Shvut Rachel decision could pave the way for the retroactive legalization of more outposts. In her 2005 report, Sasson concluded that government agencies had funneled millions of dollars in state funds to the outposts. Sasson said in an interview that construction in outposts has accelerated in the last two years, though their number has largely held steady. In her 2005 survey, she counted 105 outposts, including about half built at least in part on private Palestinian land. Sharon promised Washington to dismantle outposts built after he took office in March 2001. The Defense Ministry official said three outposts have been removed. The military has also removed mobile homes and other structures in other enclaves, but settlers routinely return to the sites. Now the Netanyahu government appears to be backing away from Sharon's promise. In January, Netanyahu appointed a three-member committee to review land and legal issues in each outpost. The panel was told illegal construction on private West Bank land should be removed, and was asked to put in order the planning and zoning status of Israeli construction on public lands, said committee member Alan Baker. While Baker said the panel enjoys a broad mandate, those supporting the settlers said they hope the committee will reach favorable conclusions. Danny Danon, a hard-line lawmaker, said he expects the committee "to show that most of the Jewish communities are built legally." Ofran, the settlement monitor, said the recent government decisions have sent a clear message to the settlers: "You build illegally where you want ... and the government of Israel will approve it for you retroactively."
[Associated
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