Hundreds of Israeli border police entered a hardline Jewish settlement outpost in the West Bank Wednesday to evict its residents after a court ruled the homes were built on private Palestinian land.
Hundreds of officers marched into the Amona outpost near Ramallah, just hours after the Israeli government announced that another 3,000 more illegal homes would be built in occupied Palestinian territory.
The officers' evacuation of Amona marked the end of months of attempts by government hardliners to legalise the outpost, and the approval over the past two weeks of nearly 5,000 new settler homes elsewhere in the occupied Palestinian territories was widely seen as a move to win their support.
There had been fears of violence after hundreds of hardline sympathisers of the settlers slipped past army roadblocks on foot and lit tyres around the outpost.
Some threw stones at the media as residents started packing their belongings, an AFP correspondent reported.
Al Jazeera's Imran Khan, reporting from the village of Taybeh in the occupied West Bank, which overlooks Amona, described fires being lit and smoke rolling down the hills.
"There are a number of people from surrounding settlements coming to support the settlers of Amona," he stated. "[Amona] is quite small. There is only about 40 houses there, but it really has become a symbol for the settler movement."
As border police were inside Amona negotiating with the settlers to leave, Khan stated that the settlers were threatening to return and "build on this land legally".
"There will likely to be a court challenge from the settlers," Khan stated.
The Israeli Supreme Court ruled three years ago that the Amona outpost was, by its standard, illegally built on stolen Palestinian land, and ordered it to be demolished.
Dozens of other unauthorised outpoststo be distinguished from Israeli government-sanctioned settlements that are also considered illegal by the international communityhave been constructed throughout the occupied West Bank by settlers.
The Israeli government has generally tolerated them.
Meanwhile, the Israeli government has announced a string of new projects that will add more than 6,000 illegal homes for Jewish settlers in the occupied West Bank in just the last two weeks.
As stated by the defence ministry, 2,000 of the latest new homes are ready to be put on the market, while the rest are in various stages of planning.
Ha Ashrawi, a member of the Palestinian Liberation Organization, stated that "such a frenzied escalation of Israel's illegal enterprise signals the final demise of the two-state solution".
"We're in a new era where life in Judaea and Samaria [the West Bank] is returning to its natural course," said Defence Minister Avidor Lieberman, who has himself long lived in an illegal West Bank settlement.
Since the January 20 inauguration of US President Donald Trump, Israel has approved the construction of 566 housing units in three settlement neighbourhoods of occupied East Jerusalem and 5,502 more elsewhere in the West Bank.
On Thursday last week, Israeli officials gave final approval for 153 settler homes in East Jerusalem.
They had been frozen under pressure from the previous US administration of Barack Obama, which had warned that settlements could derail hopes of a negotiated two-state solution.
Trump has pledged strong support for Israel, and Netanyahu's government has moved quickly to take advantage.
"We are building and we will continue building," Netanyahu said last week.
The international community considers all Jewish settlements on occupied Palestinian land as illegal and regards their construction as the biggest obstacle to a peaceful settlement of the conflict.
Aljazeera