VOA标准英语2009年-Israeli Settlers Defy Temporary Constr(在线收听

Residents of West Bank Jewish settlements are ready to resume building

Luis Ramirez | West Bank settlement of Tekoa 08 December 2009

 
In a message of defiance, concrete continues to pour to prepare a foundation for construction


Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank say they will continue to defy their government's order to freeze new construction for the next ten months.  Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has sought to quell the anger of settlers by saying that Israel will go back to building at the end of the 10-month period.  VOA Jerusalem correspondent Luis Ramirez went to the West Bank settlement of Tekoa near Bethlehem, and reports Israeli West Bank settlers there are holding the Israeli leader to his word.

It is not prime real estate, but for Amitai Sharon this barren piece of land is the future.

He poured money into building plans and looked forward to beginning work on a modest home.

"At the start of the week, I was supposed to start building. Then, the government inspectors came. I am out of luck.  It took me two years to get the blueprints," Israeli settler Amitai Sharon said.

Like many young settlers at the Tekoa settlement, Sharon and his family have been living in a trailer. "Right now, we cannot build and it means that we'll live here for another year at least, maybe," he said. "Who knows how much longer it will be before this matter is resolved."

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says settlers like Sharon will have to wait ten months.  The Israeli leader announced a temporary suspension of new construction in West Bank settlements in a bid for peace with the Palestinians. They say the settlements are eating up lands intended for a Palestinian state. 

Mr. Netanyahu has reaffirmed that building in the West Bank will continue after the moratorium.

That has not been enough to quell the anger of settlers. 

This banner at the entrance to the nearby Efrat settlement says there is no entry for Mr. Netanyahu's inspectors - sent out to enforce the freeze.

Concrete continues to pour.  In a message of defiance, activists at Efrat invited reporters to witness the laying of a foundation.

Tekoa lies in the shadows of Herodion. Two millennia ago it was a palace for the Jewish King Herod. 

For Amitai Sharon, it is a reminder of what he believes is his right to be here.  "When I look down and see the houses of the Arabs, then I look up and see Herodion, I remember who was here first," he said.

Sharon says he is not angry about the ban. For him, it's just a matter of time.
 

  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2009/12/89570.html