West Bank: Entire Palestinian communities disappeared due to Israeli settler violence

By Norwegian Refugee Council

West Bank: Entire Palestinian communities disappeared due to Israeli settler violence

Israeli settler violence and illegal takeover of Palestinian lands have forcibly transferred nearly 500 Palestinians from seven communities, over the past 20 months. Twelve families in the Ras At-Tin Bedouin community, northeast of Ramallah, fled their homes.

“There are entire Palestinian communities being wiped off the map, a shameful legacy of unrelenting violence, intimidation, and harassment perpetrated by Israeli settlers and, in some cases, encouraged by Israeli authorities. The rapid establishment of settlement outposts and takeover of Palestinian land is choking Palestinian communities, destroying their livelihoods, and putting Palestinian lives at risk. Palestinians have no choice but to flee, leaving behind their homes, schools, and jobs,” said Ana Povrzenic, NRC’s country director for Palestine.

In the latest incident, a dozen families comprising 89 Palestinians, including 39 children, were forcibly transferred from Ras At-Tin, following increased settler harassment and intimidation. Israeli settlers took over the community’s grazing lands and established a vineyard next to an Israeli military base. Israeli forces prevented Ras At-Tin residents from accessing their lands.

Some 60 Palestinian communities in the occupied West Bank are at heightened risk of forcible transfer due to Israeli settler and soldier violence, settlement expansion, and Israel’s deeply discriminatory policies and practices, including its unlawful planning and zoning regime.

“Without holding Israel accountable, more and more Palestinian communities will be forcibly transferred,” warned Povrzenic. “How many more Ras At-Tins must there be before the international community acts?”