RNA - "I strongly urge legislators to reconsider advancing this bill, which will have negative legal consequences for Israel and substantially diminish the chances for Arab-Israeli peace," the outgoing UN chief said in his final briefing at the UN Security Council on Friday on the situation in the Middle East.
On December 7, Israeli lawmakers approved a hugely-controversial bill legalizing some 4,000 settler units built on private Palestinian land in the occupied West Bank.
In the first of three readings needed to turn the bill into law, 57 members of the Knesset voted to approve the draft. Fifty-one voted against it.
More than half a million Israelis live in over 230 illegal settlements built since the 1967 Israeli occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem al-Quds.
The Palestinian Authority wants the West Bank as part of a future independent Palestinian state, with East al-Quds as its capital.
Built on occupied land, the Israeli settlements are internationally condemned as illegal.
The United States, Israel’s strongest ally, Germany, the country least critical of Tel Aviv in Europe, United Nations officials, and the European Union have strongly criticized the bill.
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