Haim Katz made the comments days after Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu’s new government took office, promising in its coalition
guidelines to make West Bank settlement construction a top priority. His
coalition includes far-right settler leaders in top posts.
Israel captured the West Bank in the 1967 Mideast war and
has built dozens of settlements that are now home to roughly 500,000 Israelis.
The Palestinians claim the entire area as part of a future
independent state and consider the settlements illegal — a position that is
widely shared by the international community. Israel’s commitment to deepening
its control of the West Bank has threatened to put it on a collision course
with some of its closest allies.
At a ceremony Sunday, Katz said he would channel resources
to promote tourism in the West Bank. “We will invest in areas that may not have
received sufficient support to date,” he said. “For example, our local Tuscany
in Judea and Samaria,” he added, using the biblical term for the West Bank
favored by religious and right-wing Israelis.
The West Bank settler community has developed a small
tourism sector that includes hotels, bed and breakfasts and wineries. Israel
considers these industries to be part of the country’s broader tourism sector,
while international human rights groups have said they deepen control of
occupied territory.
Airbnb in 2018 said it would bar listings in the Israeli settlements,
but it quickly backed down under heavy Israeli pressure. Last year, Booking.com
said it was adding warnings to its listings there.
On Friday, the U.N. General Assembly asked the U.N.’s
highest judicial body to give its opinion on the legality of Israeli policies
in the occupied West Bank.
Netanyahu called the resolution “disgraceful” and said
Israel is not obligated to cooperate with the International Court of Justice.