Israeli parliament gives $3m to colony tourism plan

34% of Israelis say the main election issue is economy

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Occupied Jerusalem: The Israeli parliament’s finance committee on Sunday voted through $3.3 million (Dh12.11 million) to build a tourist centre at a colony in the occupied West Bank, a statement said.

The money is for a project at the Barkan colony in the north of the Palestinian territory, the Knesset statement said.

It comes less than three months before a snap general election on March 17 backed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu but denounced by the opposition.

Centrist Yesh Atid party leader Yair Lapid, sacked by Netanyahu as finance minister on December 2, called Sunday’s finance committee vote “electoral corruption”.

“Netanyahu wants to please the [colonist] lobby before the elections,” he told the private television station Channel 10.

On Sunday, the premier also raised the minimum monthly salary in the public service from 4,300 shekels to 5,000 shekels ($1,095 to $1,275).

He also announced a 30 per cent price reduction for 20,500 homes due to be built in the Jewish state.

Despite the Gaza Strip war in the summer, security is not the main concern among voters, with 34 per cent in a recent poll saying the main issue is the economy, compared with 30 per cent for security.

The expansion of Jews-only colonies remains a major stumbling block to peace with the Palestinians. The international community says colonies on occupied land are illegal.

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