Israel approves 560 settlement homes in East Jerusalem
Israeli official says settlement permits had been delayed until end of Obama's presidency
Israeli authorities have approved 560 settlement homes in occupied East Jerusalem on Sunday, reported Israel Radio.
The move came only two days after new U.S. President Donald Trump was inaugurated.
The radio quoted Meir Turgeman, the Jerusalem Planning and Building committee's chairman, as saying the permits had been delayed as they awaited Barack Obama's departure from office.
After an often tense relationship between Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over Israel's settlement policy, Israeli politicians have hoped Trump might offer more support despite the settlements being illegal under international law.
Netanyahu said during his weekly cabinet meeting on Sunday that he and Trump will speak by phone for the first time later in the day about the Palestine-Israel conflict, the Syrian civil war and the Iranian nuclear deal.
"Stopping the Iranian threat, and first and foremost the threat reflected in the bad nuclear agreement that was signed with Iran, continues to be a supreme goal of the State of Israel," said Netanyahu.
"On the issue of settlement, none are more concerned about it than the Likud government and I, and we will continue to look out for it wisely and responsibly, for the benefit of the settlement enterprise and the State of Israel."
Trump's stance on the Palestine-Israel conflict has been controversial because of suggestions from his camp they would move the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, a move which would mean recognizing the city as Israel's capital, contrary to the international consensus.
Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth reported Sunday that Trump's chosen ambassador for Israel, David Friedman, plans to live in Jerusalem rather than the official residence in the city of Herzliya, near Tel Aviv.