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Israel to Seek $250 Billion for Jewish Assets Lost in Mideast

Palestinians said a decade ago they would demand more than $100 billion in compensation from Israel for assets abandoned in 1948.

Israel to Seek $250 Billion for Jewish Assets Lost in Mideast
An Israeli national flag sits on a monument celebrating Israel’s landmark traditional agriculture at the entrance to the village of Kfar Pines, Israel. (Photographer: Rina Castelnuovo/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Israel is expected to seek an estimated $250 billion in compensation for assets abandoned by Jews who fled Middle Eastern countries, Hahadashot Television reported.

Israel hired an unidentified international accounting firm to estimate damages it should seek under an expected U.S. peace plan, the report said. Israel will seek $50 billion for Jewish property in Tunisia and Libya, and claims for assets left in Morocco, Iraq, Syria, Egypt, Iran and Yemen are expected to reach $200 billion, Hahadashot added.

The Palestinians said a decade ago they would demand more than $100 billion in compensation from Israel for property abandoned in 1948, when the country came into being, the report said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Alisa Odenheimer in Jerusalem at aodenheimer@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Shaji Mathew at shajimathew@bloomberg.net, Gwen Ackerman, Paul Abelsky

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