Israeli settlers attacked 2 villages in the West Bank as violence against Palestinians escalated

Maskes settlers threw stones and burned bishop’s trucks, farm buildings and Bedouin, injuring four people last Tuesday in the latest attack on Watlest Bank.
Videos on social media showed two combined trucks engulfed in flames, with a nearby building on fire.
The Israeli army says that the soldiers rushed to the bid and Deir Sharaf after the hidden Israeli civilians attacked the Palestinians and opened fire. It said four Palestinians were being treated for injuries.
The security forces dispersed the confrontation.
The Palestinian Red Crescent says it is treating three people who were beaten with sticks and stones. Israeli police said four Israeli suspects were arrested and interrogated, in what they described as “extreme violence.”
Later, near the Baron Industrial Zone, where some of the hidden militants regrouped, they attacked the soldiers and damaged a military vehicle, the army said.
Palestinians and human rights activists accuse Israeli forces and police of failing to stop attacks on residents.
Palestinian Minister Cuayyad Shaaban, head of the Palestinian Authority Commission and the Wall Resistance Commission, said the residents set fire to four camels in Bedouin families, while pulling stones from the residents.
He said the attack was part of a campaign to drive Palestinians from their land and accused Israel of protecting the Palestinians from protection and insecurity.
Shaaban asked to be called down by groups that “sponsor and support the colonial military project.”
The parties led by the rightful Israeli settlers are very influential in the coalition government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Minister of National Security Tamar Ben-Gvir, Who oversees the police, is a serious organizer with many calls related to the funding of a designated terrorist group and the promotion of apartheid.
Finance Minister Bezaleli Smotrich, who has proposed Israel’s previous annexation of most of the West Bank, agreed to the construction of more than 5,600 housing units in that year’s rent alone. – The entire high period of one year, was reported in the times of Israel.
Israeli police arrested some Israelis after what they described as ‘extreme violence’ in two West Wang villages, the latest in a series of attacks on young victims.
There is no agreement to end western banking violence
These attacks have become more frequent in recent weeks as Palestinians harvest their olive trees.
Last Friday, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said at least 264 settlers were attacked by Palestinians in October, the highest in a month since it began tracking events in 2006.
“Since 2006, Ocha has launched some 9,600 such attacks. About 1,500 of them this year, about 15 percent of the total,” the UN body said in a statement last week.
Most of the attacks targeted the annual olive harvest, with 140 Palestinians injured and about 4,200 trees and poles trampled, according to Ocha.

This year’s Olive harvest officially went ahead about a week before Israel agreed to end funding for Hamas in Gaza. But the agreeable cease-fire agreement has no immediate effect on the violence at the bank, and some fear the situation in the incident is being ignored.
“The international focus on the end of Gaza is important, but the West Bank must not be cut off from these efforts, even if it considers itself closed due to the renewed group of Mr.
US President Donald Trump, who pulled out of the ceasefire agreement last month, said in September that he would not allow Israel to annex the West Bank.
Some Israeli politicians also warned of continued violence with far-reaching consequences.
“The residents of Yestrist, with the encouragement of political figures, are working deliberately to reduce the fields and create incredible destruction in Judea and Samaria, calling the West Bank by the name that Israel uses legally.
“Their goal is to eliminate the third Intifada, which it would bring [Israel Defence Forces] You wrote.
As Canada pushes to recognize a Palestinian state at the United Nations, Israel’s massive settlement program in a western bank threatens to erase that dream. On the national Margaret Evans, CBC’s Margaret Evans explains what’s at stake and why the Palestinians say it will crush any hope for a state.
Israel wants to expand the West Bank territories
Home to 2.7 million Palestinians, the West Bank has been in the midst of plans for a future Palestinian state with Israel.
Successive Israeli governments have rapidly expanded the settlements, dividing the land. More than half a million Israeli settlers now live in the field.
The United Nations, the Palestinians and many countries – including Canada – have referred to the sit-ins as illegal under international law. Israel opposes this, pointing out the biblical orientation of the world and the security of security.
The Israeli government intends to expand the settlements in the first settlement, it approved its controversial E1 settlement plan in August. The project, which would establish more than 3,400 housing units, would connect the existing settlement in Jerusalem.
But many Palestinians fear that he will cut off their territory from east Jerusalem and end their hopes for a declaration.

French President Emmanuel Macron said that the plan is “a partial or complete annexation” of the West Bank.
He blamed Tuesday’s attack during a meeting with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Paris, saying “Resistance of violence and the acceleration of projects for the settlement of the western heights.”
CBC News reached out to Global News Canada for comment but did not receive a response by the time of publication.
Earlier this year, the Canadian government sentenced Ben-Gvir and Smotrich in its fourth round of measures against “promoters of subjugation violence against civilians.”
In September, Canada and many publishers agreed to see the situation in Palestine, which means Prime Marc Carney’s Office was an effort to preserve the two-state solution.
Palestinians living in the West Bank say Israeli settler tactics have become more intense in the past year. Margaret Evans and the CBC news team went to the South Hebron Hills to better understand what it’s like to live in the shadow of these illegal settlements.




