Israeli Authorities Officially Regulate 40-Year-Old Neighborhood in West Bank's Kfar Adumim
The Higher Planning Council has officially approved a long-awaited plan to regulate the "Hadeir" neighborhood in Kfar Adumim, a settlement in the West Bank's Binyamin region, nearly 40 years after its establishment. The plan, promoted by the Settlement Administration under Minister Bezalel Smotrich and the Binyamin Regional Council, formalizes approximately 50 existing housing units, permits the construction of two additional units, and regulates the therapeutic pool area within the neighborhood.
This approval follows extensive planning efforts led by the Binyamin Regional Council's engineering department, which coordinated with planning institutions to finalize the scheme. Recently, the Central Command chief signed an order defining the jurisdiction of the nearby settlement of Alon, officially recognizing it as an independent locality rather than a neighborhood of Kfar Adumim, complementing the regulation of Hadeir.
Minister Smotrich described the move as part of a "historic revolution" in settlement expansion across Israel, emphasizing it as a strategic national step to strengthen Israel's hold on the land and counter left-wing efforts to evacuate settlements. He thanked the Settlement Administration and the Planning Authority for leading the process.
Israel Gantz, head of the Binyamin Regional Council and chairman of the Yesha Council, called the approval a correction of a historic injustice, granting long-standing residents legal certainty. He affirmed ongoing cooperation with the government to regulate, establish, and develop more communities in Binyamin and throughout Judea and Samaria, asserting that this settlement momentum enhances Israel's security and prevents attempts at Arab territorial takeover.