jerusalem  |  Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu asked a government panel to put off final approval of 2,500 new apartments in East Jerusalem, an official said.

The move came April 11 just as tensions were easing along Israel’s border with the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip, where a fragile quiet appeared to be taking hold after several days of escalation that raised fears of another major eruption of violence. In response to more than 125 rockets fired at Israel, the Israel Defense Forces sent retaliatory strikes into Gaza, reportedly killed 19 Palestinians.

Amid reports of an unofficial, foreign-mediated cease-fire, Palestinian militants appeared to be stilling their rocket and mortar fire, and Israel was refraining from retaliating for previous attacks.

However, Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman voiced concerns that any lull would merely allow Hamas to strengthen and regroup. He told Israel Radio that restraint was “a grave mistake” and that Israel’s main objective should be “the toppling of the Hamas regime.”

Weeks of mortar and rocket fire at southern Israel — met by Israeli reprisals — snowballed by last week into the most intense confrontation since Israel’s offensive in the Palestinian territory more than two years ago.

When rocket fire hit a school bus on the Israeli side of the border April 7, Israelis were outraged and the attack could have sent the two sides hurtling into another war. The driver and a 16-year-old boy were injured, but no one died; the bus was nearly empty, as most of the schoolchildren had exited shortly before the attack.

Israeli soldiers investigate a school bus near Sderot that was hit April 7 by a rocket from the Gaza Strip. photo/jta/flash90/dima vazinovich

One of the terrorists reportedly killed in Israeli retaliatory fire on April 9 was senior Hamas member Taysir Saliman Abu-Saname, whom the IDF said was “directly and physically involved” in the abduction of captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit.

Although there was no confirmation earlier this week that cease-fire conditions had been cemented, life in southern Israel was returning to normal, and both sides expressed readiness to halt their fire if the other would.

The easing of tensions along the Gaza border came as the Palestinian Authority moved forward with plans to gain international recognition for an independent state. The Palestinians hope to take their case to the United Nations in September and sidestep talks with Israel.

Negotiations with Netanyahu never got off the ground because he refuses to commit to an internationally mandated settlement freeze, and Palestinians say they won’t negotiate without one.

The Palestinians plan to tell a conference of donor countries this week that they are ready for statehood.

Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad has been laying the groundwork with a series of developments and reforms.

Ali Jarbawi, the Palestinian minister of planning, said April 11 that the Palestinian government has reduced its dependence on foreign aid by 35 percent in the past two years.

Netanyahu’s office had no comment when asked if it intervened to postpone the approval of the new construction in East Jerusalem, which the Palestinians envision as their future capital.

However, two officials confirmed that the projects had been struck from an Interior Ministry panel’s agenda this week. One added that Netanyahu’s office had asked the Interior Ministry to delay the discussion of the project, citing pressure from the Quartet of international peacemakers — the U.S., European Union, United Nations and Russia. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak with media.

Netanyahu on April 11 accused the international community — “people with good intentions,” he called them — of putting peace even further out of reach by telling the Palestinians they don’t have to negotiate.

“Tell the Palestinians to stop giving excuses and stop giving ifs, ands and buts,” he told a group of European ambassadors.

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