Hanan Porat, a driving force behind Israel's settlement of the West Bank, has died of cancer. He was 67.

Mr Porat, a former Israeli lawmaker, was a founder of the now-defunct movement Gush Emunim - Hebrew for "the bloc of the faithful" - a messianic movement committed to settling on land Israel captured in the 1967 war.

Movement disciples believe God promised the West Bank to the Jewish people, and they set out to cement Israeli sovereignty there by creating a large-scale civilian presence.

Even before Gush Emunim was founded in 1974, Mr Porat was a leading figure in the settlement movement launched after Israel captured the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem in 1967.

He helped establish the first settlement in the West Bank, Kfar Etzion, on the site of a kibbutz that had been captured by the Jordanian army in 1948.

He later helped create the Jewish enclave in the biblical city of Hebron, which is currently one of the most radical settlements. Hebron's ancient Jewish community was driven out after an Arab massacre in 1929.

Mr Porat later turned to politics, and was elected to Israel's parliament in 1981, serving, except for a four-year hiatus, through to 1999.

Today, about half a million Jewish settlers live in the West Bank and east Jerusalem. Israel withdrew settlers and soldiers from Gaza in 2005 - a move Mr Porat strongly opposed.

Israeli settlements, built on land the Palestinians claim for a future state, are widely denounced internationally. Continued construction there has been the latest wedge in relations with the Palestinians, who refuse to negotiate peace until the building stops.

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