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Israel OKs controversial Jerusalem cable car project

Israel OKs controversial Jerusalem cable car project
Palestinian demonstrators are separated by Israeli police barriers from Israelis celebrating 50 years of Jewish state control of Jerusalem's Old City on May 24, 2017. Israel on Sunday approved plans to install a cable car to Jerusalem's Old City, a project likely to anger Palestinians and much of the international community. (AFP / AHMAD GHARABLI)
Updated 28 May 2017

Israel OKs controversial Jerusalem cable car project

Israel OKs controversial Jerusalem cable car project

JERUSALEM: Israel’s government has approved plans to install a cable car to Jerusalem’s Old City, a project likely to anger Palestinians and much of the international community.
The plan would see a former railway station in west Jerusalem linked by cable car to the Old City in east Jerusalem, occupied by Israel in 1967 and later annexed in a move never recognized by the international community.
It would stop at the Dung Gate entrance to the Old City near the Western Wall, traversing some 1.4 km.
Current estimates say the cable car will begin operating in 2021.
At a special meeting held at the Western Wall, the cabinet approved the first phase of the plan expected to cost some 200 million shekels ($56 million), a Tourism Ministry statement said.
The meeting was held at the site to mark Israel’s capture of the Old City 50 years ago in the Six-Day War.
The status of Jerusalem is among the most sensitive issues of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Israel sees all of Jerusalem as its undivided capital, while the Palestinians view East Jerusalem as the capital of their future state.
Israeli infrastructure projects in East Jerusalem and the occupied West Bank draw harsh criticism from the Palestinians and many in the international community.
The cable car project has been discussed for several years, with Israeli officials saying it is needed to ease access to the heavily visited Western Wall.
In 2015, France-based utility giant Suez Environnement said that, because of political sensitivities, it had decided not to take part in the project.
Another example of such controversy occurred last week, when Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported that European diplomats declined to attend a tour of new Israeli rail tunnels because part of the line crosses the West Bank.
Israeli settlements in the West Bank and east Jerusalem are seen as illegal under international law, and are a major stumbling blocks to peace as they are built on land the Palestinians see as part of their future state.