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Netanyahu delays eviction of West Bank settler house

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (C) attends the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem April 1, 2012. REUTERS/Ariel Schalit/Pool

By Dan Williams

JERUSALEM (Reuters) – Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin

Netanyahu overruled the planned eviction on Tuesday of Jewish settlers from a building in an occupied West Bank city that is

flashpoint of tensions with Palestinians.

Some 20 settlers moved into the Hebron building last Thursday at night, seeking to expand a

settlement of some 500 families in the heart of a biblical city overwhelmingly populated by Palestinians who regard Israelis

as interlopers.

The settlers say they bought the two-storey structure from its Palestinian owner. This is disputed by

Palestinian police. Citing the need to maintain calm, Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak ordered the settlers out by 3 p.m.

(1:00 p.m. British time) on Tuesday.

“The prime minister has asked the defence minister to give the settlers in the

building time to allow them the possibility of pursuing legal proceedings,” an Israeli official said.

The rare veto of

Barak, who heads the only centrist party in Netanyahu’s religious-nationalist coalition, came a week after Israel’s top

court ordered the evacuation by August 1 of a West Bank settlement built without state approval, quashing bids by the

government to talk its residents into leaving voluntarily.

Though politically strong, Netanyahu has faced questions

within his Likud party and other right-wing coalition partners about his commitment to the settlers, many of whom see

themselves as exercising a Jewish birthright to biblical land.

He is also under international pressure to revive peace

talks with the Palestinians, who seek statehood in the West Bank and whose cooperation with the Israelis in the territory has

been strained by popular rancour over settlement expansions.

About 500,000 Israelis and 2.5 million Palestinians live

in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, areas which, along with the Gaza Strip, were captured by Israel in the 1967 Middle East

war.

Most world powers deem the Jewish settlements illegal. Israel disputes this and has vowed to keep major

settlement blocs under any eventual peace accord with the Palestinians.

A traditional burial site of the biblical

patriarchs revered by Jews and Muslims, Hebron is especially fraught.

Zeev Elkin, a senior Likud lawmaker, told

Israel’s Army Radio the Hebron settlers had bought the disputed building “for a great sum of money, and therefore it is

their right to live there”.

But Ramadan Awad, chief of Palestinian police in the city, denied the validity of any such

deal, saying the building had more than 50 owners. The Palestinian Authority, which has limited self-rule in the West Bank,

outlaws the sale of land to Israelis.

“One of its owners sold his share to a Palestinian from Gaza presently in the

West Bank, who was detained and held by the (Palestinian) security forces to investigate whether he sold it to settlers,”

Awad told Reuters. “Even if he sold that share, it represents only a small part of the whole house.”

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Asked when the settlers in the disputed Hebron building might now face eviction, a Barak

aide declined to provide details, saying there were “operational considerations”.

(Additional reporting Ali Sawafta;

Writing by Dan Williams; Editing by Jeffrey Heller)

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