Ramot was built on land expropriated from Palestinian landowners in 1970. According to
ARIJ, Israel confiscated land from two nearby
Palestinian villages: • 1,530
dunams from
Beit Iksa, • 134 dunams from
Beit Hanina. Ramot is administered by Israel as part of the Jerusalem municipality. However, since part of the neighborhood has been built across the Green Line in East Jerusalem, the international community considers Ramot to be an Israeli settlement. Israel unilaterally annexed East Jerusalem and maintains that developments in East Jerusalem are not settlements, but the move was condemned by the UN Security Council as "null and void" and was not recognized by the international community. The international community considers Israeli settlements to be illegal under international law, violating the
Fourth Geneva Convention's prohibition on the transfer of a civilian population into territory held under
military occupation, but Israel considers East Jerusalem its sovereign territory. The
U.S. government, as the rest of the international community, refers to Israeli neighborhoods in East Jerusalem as "settlements" and Israeli Jews living in East Jerusalem, including in Ramot, as "settlers". The
United States Department of State,
European Union and the Palestinians described the plans to build 800 new homes in West Bank settlements and 600 in East Jerusalem, including 294 in Ramot, as harmful to the peace process. Spokesperson for the U.S. State Department,
Jen Psaki, said "We consider now and have always considered the settlements to be illegitimate". and
Geneva accords proposed keeping Ramot (and other Jewish neighborhoods in Jerusalem beyond the green line) under Israeli sovereignty, possibly in exchange for other land. ==Architecture==