
The bill, approved by a 64 to 51 vote, is
the latest blow to remaining hopes for a two-state solution to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Formulated by Shuli Moalem-Refaeli of the far-right Jewish Home party, it comes weeks after US President Donald Trump's decision to recognise Jerusalem as Israel's capital sparked deadly protests in the Palestinian territories.
It determines that any ceding of lands
considered by Israel to be part of Jerusalem would necessitate a
two-thirds majority vote in parliament -- 80 out of 120 members of the
Knesset.
It also enables changing the municipal
definition of Jerusalem, which means that sectors of the city "could be
declared separate entities," a statement from parliament read.
Israeli right-wing politicians have
spoken of unilaterally breaking off overwhelmingly Palestinian areas of
the city in a bid to increase its Jewish majority.
Israel occupied east Jerusalem and the
West Bank in 1967. It later annexed east Jerusalem in a move never
recognised by the international community.
It claims all of Jerusalem as its united
capital, while the Palestinians see the eastern sector as the capital
of their future state.
The issue is among the most contentious in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
"We've ensured the unity of Jerusalem," Education Minister Naftali Bennett, who heads Jewish Home, said after the vote.
"The Mount of Olives, the Old City and the City of David will forever remain ours," he wrote on Twitter.
Dov Henin of the opposition's mainly Arab Joint List said the new law should be called "the law to prevent peace".
"Without an agreement on Jerusalem there
will be no peace," he said ahead of the final vote. "The law means that
there will be bloodshed."
Trump's December 6 decision upended
decades of precedent and broke with international consensus, but
maintains that Jerusalem's final status would have to be decided in
negotiations between the two sides.
The new law is however not necessarily definitive. It can be changed by a regular parliamentary majority of 61.
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