Approval of a new occupation plan in the Zionist parliament

According to the report of Fars News Agency, the Zionist parliament approved the plan to cancel the so-called “call termination law”.
This law came into effect in 2005 and ordered the demolition of 21 Zionist settlements in the north of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, and the evacuation of Israeli settlers and the regime’s army from this area.
The newspaper “Times of Israel” reported that the plan to cancel some clauses of the “Stop Calling Law” was approved with 31 votes in favor and 18 votes against.
In further explanation of the new Knesset resolution, this newspaper canceled the clauses of this law that prohibited the entry of Israelis to the areas that were once the settlements of “Ghanim”, “Kadim”, “Homish” and “Sanor”.
The Zionist army must now sign a military order to allow the return of the occupiers to the mentioned areas.
The Times of Israel acknowledged that the Palestinians will take this action as a new attempt to steal their lands.
Hundreds of thousands of Israelis live in Jewish settlements built by the Zionist regime after the 1967 war and the occupation of Palestinian lands in the West Bank and East of Jerusalem.
The United Nations and most countries of the world consider the settlements of the Zionist regime illegal because this regime occupied these lands in the 1967 war and based on the Geneva Convention, any construction by the occupier in the occupied lands is prohibited.
Palestinians seek to form an independent state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, with Jerusalem as its capital. They also want Israel to withdraw from the territories occupied in 1967, but Israel refuses to return to the pre-Six Day War borders.
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