The Supreme Court has issued a destruction order for the small town of Netiv Ha'avot, in Gush Etzion, overriding the policy of the state.

The Supreme Court has issued a destruction order for ten buildings in the small town of Netiv Ha'avot, in Gush Etzion, overriding the policy of the state.

Similarly the judges ordered the destruction of seven buildings which the state had already slated for eviction.

In order to allow the residents to prepare, demolition orders will be put out for the 17 buildings over the course of a year and a half. Two of the buildings are set to be evacuated and destroyed by the end of this year.

The ruling was petitioned by extreme-left organization "Peace Now," together with several Arabs who claim ownership of the land.

In the justices' decision, they wrote: "There is no one who disagrees that all the buildings were built illegally, without any zoning permit for the outpost, and without receiving the necessary permissions...it is the state's obligation to enforce the zoning and building laws as required."

(Editor's note: Residents of the Binyamin region have told the editors that although the official processes are still in place, building permits have not been issued for new houses for years, so it has become standard practice to file for a permit, and then begin building, in the hope that the responsible office may retroactively approve a building or a home. This claim remains unconfirmed officially.)

Agriculture Minister Uri Ariel (Jewish Home) commented after the Supreme Court handed down its ruling that "the decision of the justices of the Supreme Court is very puzzling to me, since specifically in Netiv Ha'avot, we found a solution, through an agreement, which was backed by the state."

"In a working democracy, the parliament is the sovereign, and the government is the one who sets policy," and not the Supreme Court, Ariel implied.

"Therefore, we must legislate, at the earliest possible opportunity, the 'Legalization Law'," Ariel continued, referring to a law which would give a legitimate process for legalizing towns built after the Oslo Accords, such as Amona, which the Supreme Court ordered destroyed by December.