The wild West Bank: The lawless settlers terrorising Palestinian farmers | Occupied West Bank News


Susya, West Financial institution – Wadi Raheem is a dry riverbed close to the Palestinian village of Susya within the South Hebron hills within the occupied West Financial institution. The world has a stark magnificence that’s characterised by rolling hills, rocky outcrops and gorgeous vistas. Regardless of the commonly poor soil, Palestinians have managed to eke out an existence right here – reportedly since no less than the 1830s – by practising subsistence farming and animal herding.

It’s 4 o’clock within the afternoon and brutally scorching. Khalil al-Harini, who owns a part of the wadi, has requested me and two different activists to accompany him as he grazes his sheep. Israeli settlers have been harassing him for many years, however the frequency and severity of the assaults have elevated considerably within the months since October 7, and he’s nervous.

Al-Harini is 81 years previous, and his face, framed by a plain white keffiyeh, is lined from publicity to the solar. However he walks energetically amongst his sheep, waving his stick at them after they stray too far. He tells me his grandfather’s father was born on this land, and I can image the identical idyllic scene happening a century earlier – an previous man tending to his herd silently, with solely the sheep’s rhythmic munching of the dry grass interrupting the quiet.

This stillness belies a deep concern for his household. His 15-year-old grandson, additionally named Khalil, had been threatened the day before today within the wadi.

First, two youngsters had come roaring down into the valley on all-terrain automobiles, music blaring and Israeli flags flapping within the wind. Once they noticed Khalil tending sheep, they turned up the music even louder, jumped off their automobiles and commenced to bop, thrusting their hips. The message was clear: “We will do no matter we would like, and there’s nothing you are able to do to cease us.”

Shortly afterwards, a settler armed with an M16 rifle confirmed up. He stated that the wadi was a safety zone and he promised that there can be “an enormous downside” if Khalil was there the subsequent day.

As we came upon, he meant it.

Hebron Hills
Fifteen-year-old Khalil walks with the sheep on the household’s land within the South Hebron hills [Hamdan Ballal/Al Jazeera]

Beneath a veneer of legality

Like a lot of the West Financial institution, al-Harini’s house village of Susya has suffered its share of injustice meted out by Israel. Since seizing the West Financial institution in 1967, Israel has shunned formally annexing it – excluding occupied East Jerusalem – and has as an alternative targeted on increasing its presence.

Israel has constructed unlawful settlements, successfully incorporating these areas into its territory, whereas concurrently holding the variety of Palestinians in Israel’s enlargement as little as attainable. A lot of the hassle to expel the Palestinians from their land has occurred in Space C (61 % of the West Financial institution), similar to within the Jordan Valley or the South Hebron hills, that are sparsely populated.

The authorities have seized roughly half of the West Financial institution for navy and state functions and likewise expropriated land for public wants.

And so it has been with Susya. Within the early Eighties, stays of an historic synagogue have been found close by – this was used as justification to expel all of the villagers, together with al-Harini and his household.

“I lived in previous Susya in a cave contained in the village,” he tells me. “However then the Israeli occupation pressured us to depart in 1986.”

Extra expulsions of the residents of Susya adopted in 1991 and 2001. On every event, they have been pressured to maneuver farther and farther from the unique village, nonetheless they made positive to stay on their ancestral agricultural land.

“We at all times wish to keep on our land,” Nasser Nawajah, a resident of Susya who works for the Israeli NGO B’Tselem, instructed me. “We’re afraid that if we depart, we’ll by no means be allowed to come back again.”

Susya is now a hamlet of some dilapidated shacks. The residents are afraid to construct extra everlasting buildings as a result of they know there’s a actual risk that they are going to be demolished by the authorities. Your entire village has been torn down on seven separate events.

SOUTH HEBRON HILLS, WEST BANK - JANUARY 05: Landscape views of Palestinian land threatened by nearby Israeli settlements, January 5, 2024, in the South Hebron Hills of the West Bank. (Photo by Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images)
Panorama views of Palestinian land threatened by close by Israeli settlements within the South Hebron hills of the West Financial institution, January 2024. There was a pointy rise in settler violence since October 7 [Andrew Lichtenstein/Getty]

Focusing on Palestinians and their property

There are at the moment greater than 700,000 settlers residing in 150 unlawful settlements and 128 outposts (settlements unauthorised by the Israeli authorities) within the West Financial institution, East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights.

Many settlers select to reside within the settlements for the financial benefits granted by the federal government, however roughly one-third are thought-about ideological settlers, who consider they’re doing God’s work by settling the land.

Through the years, settlers have focused Palestinians and their properties by way of numerous means: throwing stones, setting fires to properties and companies, slicing down olive bushes, damaging water infrastructure and stealing or killing livestock.

Settler violence has additionally concerned beatings and, in excessive instances, the taking pictures and killing of Palestinian civilians. As well as, settlers have usually seized (PDF) non-public Palestinian land, with subsequent to no help from the authorities to implement the regulation and return the land to its rightful proprietor.

“My household was subjected to many assaults by settlers, they usually have been usually very violent with us,” al-Harini says. “I bear in mind there was an assault on me personally once I was grazing my sheep on my non-public land. Two masked settlers got here and began hitting my sheep with stones. I attempted to cease them, however they pushed me, and I fell on my neck, which led to a fracture within the third vertebra.”

Hebron Hills
‘My household was subjected to many assaults by settlers, they usually have been usually very violent with us,’ al-Harini says. He was as soon as attacked by settlers whereas grazing his sheep on his non-public land and suffered a fractured vertebrae [Hamdan Ballal/Al Jazeera]

A kidnapping on the wadi

Again on the wadi, al-Harini’s fears have been realised.

A white van stops on the dust street within the valley, 100 metres (328 toes) away. Three uniformed males emerge, M16s in hand. They run in the direction of us, screaming, with weapons pointed in our route. “On the bottom! On the bottom!”

Khalil, having seen the settlers approaching, enters the wadi to affix us. The uniformed males shortly pin him to the bottom, a gun at his again.

The settlers proceed to threaten us, telling us they’ll shoot if we make one fallacious transfer. They name us Nazis, Hamas, ISIL (ISIS), anti-Semites. The hatred of their eyes frightens me.

I take into consideration my good friend Peter, who was crushed unconscious with a steel pipe by a gaggle of settlers in Hebron a couple of years earlier. I can’t think about what it’s like for Khalil, who is aware of the settlers will act with full impunity. Palestinians’ complaints to the authorities about these assaults are usually ignored. In line with Israeli human rights group Yesh Din, 92 % of investigations into settler assaults on Palestinians are closed with out indictment.

I ask the settlers why they’re threatening al-Harini, an previous man merely grazing his sheep on his land.

The response: “He could also be harmless, however I’m positive that his household needs to kill all Jews. Everyone hates the Jews. However that’s OK. God is with us.”

Finally the settlers tire of the confrontation. They steal our passports, telephones and cameras, and say we can be arrested if we ever return. Khalil is zip-tied and shoved roughly into the again of the van. They drive off. I shudder to suppose what’s going to occur to him.

After the assault, I stroll slowly up the hill to al-Harini’s home, the place he’s now along with his spouse, Hakimeh.

“My child. My child,” she cries softly. “When is he going to come back house?”

Hebron Hills
Al-Harini and his spouse, Hakimeh, have been nervous for Khalil’s security after he was taken from their land by settlers [Hamdan Ballal/Al Jazeera]

An ‘insufferable’ scenario

Everybody I spoke with in Susya famous a pointy rise in settler violence after October 7.

“The assaults elevated on the village typically and have been extra violent than earlier than. They attacked us at evening and through the day,” says al-Harini.

“Settlers carrying military uniforms would come in the course of the evening and search and vandalise the homes. They lower the water pipes linked from the water nicely to the within of the home. They prevented us from ploughing our land and even grazing on it.”

Data collected by the NGO Armed Battle and Location Occasion Information affirm the villagers’ experiences. The variety of violent incidents within the West Financial institution involving settlers doubled within the fourth quarter of 2023 in contrast with the third quarter, and the variety of assaults with firearms elevated sevenfold.

“The scenario … is insufferable. The violence has reached ranges we’ve by no means witnessed earlier than,” Yasmeen el-Hasan, coordinator of the Union of Agricultural Work Committees, a Ramallah-based grassroots organisation serving to Palestinian farmers, instructed The New Arab in Might.

She was talking in mid-April after 1,500 settlers attacked the Palestinian village of al-Mughayyir, northeast of Ramallah, concentrating on vehicles, homes and livestock. In the course of the three-hour raid, which was reportedly in response to the killing of a settler, one resident was killed and no less than 25 others have been injured.

The heightened violence shouldn’t be random. With the world targeted on the persevering with genocide in Gaza, far-right factions of the Israeli authorities have used the chance to additional their objective of annexing the West Financial institution.

Minister of Finance Bezalel Smotrich, who oversees settlement planning and has promised to flood the West Financial institution with a million new settlers, revealed as a lot to his colleagues within the Non secular Zionism celebration, when he said that he was “set up[ing] information on the bottom so as to make Judea and Samaria an integral a part of the state of Israel”.

A lot of the violence can be promoted by Minister of Nationwide Safety Itamar Ben-Gvir, whose previous contains threatening to kill former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, being indicted no less than 50 instances for incitement to violence or hate speech and referring to Baruch Goldstein as a hero. Goldstein massacred 29 Muslim worshippers in a Hebron mosque in 1994.

Ben-Gvir purchased no less than 10,000 assault rifles for safety groups in October and proudly introduced in March that 100,000 new gun licences have been distributed to Israeli civilians since October 7.

“The hordes of settlers that swept throughout Palestinian villages have been emboldened by Ben-Gvir and Smotrich’s ideological and materials assist of settler militias all through the West Financial institution, much more so after 7 October,” stated el-Hasan.

The results of the elevated violence have been devastating. Israeli troopers and settlers have killed greater than 600 Palestinians within the West Financial institution and seized 37,000 acres (15,000 hectares) of land since October 7. So far, 18 Palestinian communities have been emptied.INTERACTIVE-LIVE-TRACKER-GAZA-Aug15-2024-1020_1080x1350-1723720129

‘I believed they may kill him’

Khalil returned to the wadi the day after he was taken away by the authorities.

He says that the settlers had blindfolded him earlier than taking him to a close-by military base for questioning. “They requested me concerning the land, and I instructed them it belonged to my household,” Khalil recounts. “One of many troopers stated, ‘Have a look at my face and know nicely. When you return once more to that land, you will notice one thing that you don’t like.’”

Khalil was then dumped on the aspect of the street outdoors as-Samu, a city about 25km (15 miles) from Wadi Raheem. He walked to a home with a light-weight on and known as his household to select him up.

With Khalil again house al-Harini talks concerning the concern he felt for his grandson. “I can’t categorical what was inside me that evening,” al-Harini says. “After I noticed them taking Khalil to the automotive, which was a civilian automotive belonging to the settlers, I grew to become actually afraid, and I believed they may kill him.

“Sure, I had that feeling. As a result of these settlers are very violent.”

“I felt afraid for him,” says Khalil’s grandmother, Hakimeh. “I began crying. My coronary heart broke for him. He’s nonetheless a baby, not more than 15 years previous. I anticipated that I’d by no means see him once more, particularly in gentle of the circumstances we live in.”

What would she say to one of many settlers if he have been standing in entrance of her, I ask.

Hakimeh solutions, “That is my land. I can’t depart it, it doesn’t matter what I’ve a proper and I’m the proprietor of this land. I can’t surrender a speck of dust from my land. I’ll die and be buried on it. This land is our land. No one will drive us to depart our land and our house.”

With further reporting by Hamdan Ballal

Hebron Hills
When Khalil was taken from the wadi, the settlers blindfolded him and took him to a close-by military base the place they questioned him about possession of the land [Hamdan Ballal/Al Jazeera]

Leave a Comment