The Israeli Supreme Court decided to once again postpone the controversial decision to demolish the Bedouin community of Al-Khan Al-Ahmar, east of Jerusalem, to May 1 after blaming the government, finding it satisfied A lawsuit was filed against the government to enforce the demolition decision, handed down in 2018, but the Israeli executive body faced international pressure against the process and a decision was made to demolish Al-Khan Al-Ahmar. in 2018 after a ruling that the village was built without obtaining Israeli permits. The right-wing Israeli Regav is suing the government to force officials to demolish the village, whose 200 residents have attracted international attention.
Benjamin Netanyahu’s government, which took office in December 2022, requested additional time to decide on the fate of Khan al-Ahmar and asked the court to give time to present a demolition plan for the village.
In its decision on Tuesday, the court agreed to postpone the hearing until May 1, 2023, but expressed regret that the government is “satisfied with the current situation and every few months delays its response.” “Al-Khan Al-Ahmar” 8 times, and opponents believe the move is that demolishing the assembly “will allow Israel to expand settlements in such a way that the West Bank is divided in two, making it impossible to establish a geographically contiguous Palestinian state” .