Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gestures during a weekly cabinet meeting at the Prime Minister's office in Jerusalem, on June 24, 2019. (Xinhua/JINI/Noam Revkin Fenton)
Despite rage of Palestinians, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu lays cornerstone for 650 new settlement homes in West Bank, and vows to build more.
JERUSALEM, Aug. 8 (Xinhua) -- Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday laid the cornerstone for hundreds of new homes for Jewish settlers in the West Bank, and pledged to build more.
The prime minister attended a ceremony to inaugurate the construction of 650 new housing units in a new neighborhood of Beit El, a settlement north of Ramallah.
He vowed that his government will build more homes in the settlements.
"Our mission is to establish the Jewish people in its land and to ensure our sovereignty in our historical homeland," he said, referring to both Israel and the occupied West Bank.
Commenting on the killing of an Israeli soldier in a suspected stabbing attack outside a settlement earlier in the day, Netanyahu said Israel "will apprehend those who seek our lives."
"We will deepen our roots in all parts of our homeland," he added.
During a visit to the West Bank in July, Netanyahu, who is on a re-election campaign, vowed to have thousands of new settlement homes built in "the next few years," a move sought by his right-wing electoral base.
The settlements are located in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, predominantly Palestinian territories seized by Israel in the 1967 Middle East war.
Israel annexed East Jerusalem shortly after the war and has since controlled it despite international criticism.
Some 600,000 Israelis now live in the West Bank and East Jerusalem in heavily guarded settlements along with about 2.9 million Palestinians, according to Israeli figures.
The Palestinians have been seeking to establish an independent state along the 1967 border with East Jerusalem as its capital.