
Dozens of Amona residents protested on Sunday morning outside Prime Minister's office in Jerusalem.
The residents demanded the government keep the promises they signed on in the mutually agreed upon compromise reached in December.
According to the government-initiated agreement, if the Supreme Court rejected the proposal allowing Amona to remain on the same mountaintop, the government would create a new town for Amona's residents in a different location in the Binyamin Region.
The Supreme Court froze the proposed Amona draft on January 23, rejecting the government's proposal to apply the Absentee Property Law to the plots of land adjacent to Amona and claiming there were Arabs who owned the land in question. In their decision, the Supreme Court forbade the Israeli government from using the Absentee Property Law to provide any kind of solution for Amona's residents.
The eviction of Amona's residents began before the Supreme Court announced its decision. However, even when it became apparent that Amona's residents had no place to go, the government continued to evict them and destroy their homes.
