The Israeli government has approved nearly $13 million in financing
for the occupied West Bank settlements of Kiryat Arba and Hebron,
according to officials. 
The decision by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's far-right cabinet
 will see some 50 million Israeli shekels ($12.8 million) allocated to
"strengthen" the Jewish-only settlements. 
The money will be allocated over three years and be designated to a
variety of issues, including social, education and security services, and
come from the budgets of the relevant ministries.
Kiryat Arba is a large settlement near Hebron, the largest Palestinian
West Bank city, which is also host to several hundred Jewish settlers
in a tightly guarded enclave.
The settlers live in the heart of a Palestinian area and are protected by
thousands of Israeli soldiers, while local Palestinians endure restricted
movement due to the military checkpoints in and around Hebron's
 historic Old City. 
The Hebron area settlers have been affected by the recent wave of
violence that has rocked Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories
 since last October.
At least 214 Palestinians, 34 Israelis, two Americans, an Eritrean and
 a Sudanese have been killed.
Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank are considered illegal
 under international law and major stumbling blocks in negotiations
between Palestinians and Israelis. 
Between 2009 and 2014, Israeli settlements expanded by 23 percent in
the West Bank, including East Jerusalem. Upwards of half a million
Jewish Israelis already live in more than 150 Jewish-only settlements
across the West Bank and East Jerusalem,according to the Israeli human
 rights group B'Tselem. 
The United States, the European Union and many others in the
international community have called for a halt to settlement building.
"We're familiar with the American position; we don't accept it.
 Building in Jerusalem and Maale Adumim is not, with all due respect,
 distancing peace," Netanyahu said on Wednesday at a press conference
in Rwanda, referring to an illegal settlement near Jerusalem. 
Netanyahu's government is considered to be the most right-wing in
 Israel's history, and key members of his cabinet are strong supporters
of settlement building and opponents of a Palestinian state.
A similar decision, allocating 70 million shekels ($18 million) to a
 variety of settlements, was announced last month. Two officials said
 Sunday's decision was separate. 
Also on Sunday, Israeli forces arrested at least 16 Palestinians in
occupied East Jerusalem and the rest of the West Bank, local media
 reported. 
During clashes with Palestinians with Sair, a blockaded Hebron-area
 village, Israeli forces shot and injured at least five people with
rubber-coated steel bullets, the local 
Ma'an News Agency reported.