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World Wide Jun 03, 2026

Settler Violence Forces Palestinian Shepherds from West Bank Grazing Lands

Intensified attacks by Israeli settlers have driven dozens of Palestinian families from their homes…
Escalating Settler Campaign Displaces Palestinian ShepherdsMukhlis Masa’id of Khirbet Yarza has endured three years of mounting settler aggression that culminated in the exodus of about 100 Palestinians from the village in March 2026. The attacks, which began to intensify in October 2023, have targeted crops, homes, and the grazing lands that sustain the community.Coordinated Attacks on Khirbet Yarza and Neighboring VillagesEarly 2026: Residents gathered surviving livestock and abandoned the village after near‑daily assaults.April 15, 2026: Settlers, backed by 12 Israeli military vehicles, stormed a livestock pen in Jifna, stole 180 head of cattle and shot a neighbour.January 27, 2026: Settlers stole 300 head of livestock in the Masafer Yatta area.Since 2023, settlers have destroyed crops, attacked tractors, and seized grazing lands across Area C and parts of Area A.Livestock Losses and Humanitarian StatisticsEstimated loss for one farmer: 450,000 shekels (≈$150,000).FAO 2025 report: 2/3 of 72,000 farming families in the occupied West Bank need emergency aid.OCHA data: Monthly violent incidents rose from 2 per month in 2020 to 27 in the first four months of 2026.Livestock numbers have fallen from 1.75 million four years ago to 480,000 today.87% of the West Bank livestock sector is concentrated between Masafer Yatta and the Jordan Valley, most of which lies in Area C.Erosion of Palestinian Agricultural Livelihoods and Food SecurityThe systematic intimidation aims to drive entire farming communities off their land, undermining a way of life that has persisted for centuries. With more than 90% of the land between Masafer Yatta and the Jordan Valley off‑limits to Palestinians, settlers enjoy unrestricted grazing while locals face loss of income, disease‑ridden animals, and deteriorating food security.Experts warn that without support, Palestinians may be forced to purchase sacrificial animals from settlers who are protected by the Israeli army, further entrenching economic dependency.Outlook: Growing Humanitarian Crisis Without International InterventionAbbas Melhem of the Union of Palestinian Agricultural Associations cautions that the region is "on the brink of collapse in food security" for both plant and animal sectors. Continued settler aggression and lack of protection could accelerate the decline of livestock and agricultural output, prompting a deeper humanitarian emergency unless the international community steps in.
#Israeli settlers #Palestinian shepherds #Jordan Valley
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World Wide Jun 03, 2026

Israel Detains Palestine Women's Football Player Rand Halawani

Israeli authorities have extended the detention of Rand Halawani, a 20-year-old player on the Pales…
The Detention of Rand Halawani Israeli authorities have extended the detention of a player on the Palestinian women’s national football team after she was summoned for questioning in Jerusalem, Palestinian officials have reported. The Palestinian Football Association (PFA) denounced the prolonged detention of 20-year-old Rand Halawani, who was arrested on Tuesday evening. Systematic Targeting of Palestinian Athletes In a statement, the PFA said Halawani’s arrest and that of a former national team player was “not an isolated incident, it is part of a well-documented pattern of systematic targeting of Palestinian athletes, which continues without accountability”. Extended Detention and Other Arrests According to the Palestinian governorate for Jerusalem, an Israeli court on Wednesday extended Halawani’s detention until Friday. Israel’s military also arrested former national football player Natalie Abu Diyeh, a student at Birzeit University, as well as three other young Palestinian women in the occupied West Bank on Tuesday. Reasons for Arrest and Reactions The military said in a statement that the four women were suspected of “promoting terrorist activities and additional terrorist-related activities”. Birzeit University denounced the arrests as part of Israel’s “systematic policies targeting Palestinian education and students’ right to continue their academic journey”. Bishop Imad Haddad of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land, to which Natalie Abu Diyeh belonged, called for her release. Palestinian Prisoners in Israeli Jails According to the Prisoners Club, the main association for prisoners’ rights in the Palestinian territories, 89 Palestinian women are currently in Israeli jails, including three minors and three pregnant women. The Palestinian Authority-affiliated Prisoners Club announced in late May that more than 9,400 Palestinians were in Israeli jails, including Palestinian citizens of Israel.
#Israel #Palestine #Women's Football
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Economy May 31, 2026

Palestinian Graduates Face Collapsed Job Market Amidst Economic Crisis

Palestinian graduates in the West Bank face unprecedented unemployment rates as the local economy s…
The Lead: Graduation Celebration Amidst Economic DespairAt Bethlehem University, the sound of drums and whistles fills the air as final-year students celebrate their graduation. Families gather with flowers and phones, but beneath the festivities, a quiet dread prevails among graduates facing a collapsed job market.The Event Details: Education as a Broken PromiseFor decades, education has been one of the few paths Palestinians could rely on for stability and social mobility despite occupation and political instability. Now, many young graduates say that promise is collapsing.Siwar Abu Kamal, 21, a business student, reflects: "The older you get, the more reality shocks you." Her classmate Christy Abu Mahour, 21, adds: "We don't get the same options as everyone else."Reaching graduation takes more than academic perseverance. Students face military raids, road closures, unpredictable commutes, and classes moving online with each political escalation. Many have also worked to fund their degrees as financial pressure at home mounted.The Data Analysis: Unemployment Crisis in NumbersNearly 40 percent of young Palestinians in the occupied West Bank holding at least a diploma are unemployed, according to figures cited by the Palestine Economic Policy Research Institute (MAS).Overall unemployment has more than doubled since October 2023, peaking at 35.2 percent in early 2024 and sitting at 27.5 percent by the end of 2025. Israel's indefinite freeze of work permits for 115,000 Palestinians from the West Bank who worked in Israel has compounded the crisis.In the Bethlehem governorate alone, about 1,080 people holding at least a master's degree have left in the past three years, according to former mayor Maher Canawati.The Impact Analysis: Economy That Cannot Absorb TalentEvery year, Palestinian universities produce tens of thousands of graduates, but the economy has not been growing to meet them. Salsabyl Salama, 25, graduated in 2023 with a degree in physiotherapy but now works at a supermarket checkout. "It's not what I dreamed of," she says, "but it allows me to depend on myself."The public sector, once seen as a stable path, has become increasingly unreliable. Since 2021, the Palestinian Authority has struggled to pay salaries as Israel withholds Palestinian tax revenues. By mid-2025, public sector workers had accumulated billions of dollars in unpaid wages, according to the World Bank.Decades of dependence on jobs in Israel left the Palestinian economy too weak to absorb graduates locally, effectively turning Palestinian workers into "political hostages," tying their livelihoods to volatile Israeli security considerations rather than sustainable domestic growth.The Prediction: Exodus of Talent and ResilienceThe crisis is driving a growing number of Palestinians to leave the country altogether. "All of the brains are leaving," says Canawati. "Getting immigration papers and leaving Palestine without those who can actually build the economy, build the country."For those who stay, leaving their field entirely is sometimes the only option. Salama has enrolled in a pastry chef course alongside her job at a grocery store, an attempt to rebuild some sense of direction. "I was beginning to lose hope, but hope came back to me," she says.Despite the challenges, graduates maintain resilience. "There is happiness here," says Abu Kamal over the sound of drums and cheering. "We hold on to hope because people deserve happiness."
#Palestine #West Bank #Unemployment
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World Wide May 30, 2026

Palestinian Doctor Killed as Israeli Strikes Hit Gaza and West Bank Amid Eid al‑Adha

A drone strike in central Gaza killed Dr. Jamal Abu Aboun, head of anaesthesia at Al‑Yafa Medical H…
Lead: Fatal Strike on a Gaza Hospital Amid Eid al‑AdhaDr. Jamal Abu Aboun, the head of anaesthesia at Al‑Yafa Medical Hospital in Deir al‑Balah, was killed by an Israeli drone strike near Al‑Aqsa Martyrs Hospital on Saturday, 30 May 2026. The strike also wounded three people, including a child, as Israeli forces intensified attacks across Palestine during the fourth day of the Muslim holiday.Deadly Drone Strike Claims Life of Dr. Jamal Abu Aboun in Central GazaThe strike hit a civilian group near the hospital, according to a medical source at Al‑Aqsa Hospital quoted by Anadolu. Earlier that day, artillery shelling hit areas east and south of Khan Younis and the al‑Bureij refugee camp, adding to the casualty toll.Casualty Toll Since the October “Ceasefire”922 Palestinians killed in Gaza since the ceasefire.2,786 injured in Gaza since the ceasefire.Overall war figures (Palestinian sources): 72,000 killed and over 172,000 injured since October 2023.West Bank figures (Palestinian sources): 1,168 killed, 12,666 injured, about 33,000 displaced, and nearly 23,000 detained since October 2023.Settler attacks in April: at least 540 incidents targeting homes, farms, and trees.Escalation of Violence in Gaza and the Occupied West BankThe attacks occurred while Israeli settlers assaulted homes in Beita (north‑west West Bank) and damaged farmland in Khirbet el‑Muraq (south‑west West Bank). The violence follows reports of Israeli soldiers describing a “climate of dehumanisation” and permissive rules of engagement during the ceasefire period.Outlook: Prospects for De‑Escalation or Further ConflictInternational observers warn that the convergence of military strikes in Gaza and settler aggression in the West Bank during a major religious holiday could undermine diplomatic efforts to sustain the ceasefire. Continued civilian casualties and reports of celebratory gunfire among troops suggest a high risk of further escalation unless pressure mounts for renewed negotiations.
#Dr. Jamal Abu Aboun #Gaza #West Bank
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Politics May 29, 2026

Germany Expresses Concern Over Israeli Plan to Extend Control in Gaza

The German government has expressed concern over Israeli plans to extend its military control of Ga…
The Israeli Plan to Extend Control in Gaza The German government has expressed concern over Israeli plans to extend its military control of Gaza. A spokesperson for the German Foreign Office said on Friday that Berlin opposes any permanent division of Gaza. Netanyahu's Order to Increase Control The comment came in response to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's order to the Israeli military to increase control in the enclave to 70 percent. This move raises questions over the durability of the nominal ceasefire brokered by the United States and regional countries, including Qatar and Turkiye, in October. The Impact on Gaza's Population An expansion of Israeli control would also worsen conditions for Gaza's 2.3 million people already squeezed into about 35 percent of the small enclave. The steady expansion of Israeli control since the ceasefire has raised Palestinian fears that Israel aims to permanently annex large parts of the enclave. Fears of Annexation Speaking on Thursday, Netanyahu suggested Israel might even seize more than 70 percent of Gaza. Critics argue that the term 'voluntary' is a euphemism, following nearly three years of genocide when most of Gaza's infrastructure has been destroyed, leaving the territory uninhabitable. The International Response Germany is one of Israel's closest allies and its second-largest weapons supplier after the US. However, in recent months Berlin has begun criticising some Israeli actions, including its annexation of more territory in the occupied West Bank, and the implementation of the death penalty solely for Palestinians.
#Israel #Gaza #Germany
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Politics May 29, 2026

Israel Launches Digital Land Registry in Occupied West Bank, Sparking Palestinian Outcry

Israel has activated an online “Land Registry and Settlement of Rights” platform to record property…
Israel launched the online “Land Registry and Settlement of Rights” platform on May 27, 2026 to digitally record property ownership throughout the occupied West Bank. Palestinian officials, including the Jerusalem Governorate and the Colonization and Wall Resistance Commission (CRRC), condemned the move as a “dangerous colonial occupation step” and urged Palestinians to avoid any interaction with the system. Digital Land Registry Rollout Marks New Phase of Israeli Control The platform represents a shift from traditional field‑based control to “digital and administrative colonial engineering,” according to CRRC head Moayad Shaaban. By integrating land registration into Israel’s “Tabu” system, the Israeli Land Registry unit will assume authority over land regulation, sales permits, and fee collection in Area C, the portion of the West Bank under full Israeli control. Numbers Behind the Land Registration Drive 58 % of Area C began permanent acquisition and registration on Feb 15, 2026. Israel aims to complete registration of 15 % of the West Bank by the end of 2030. Approximately 700,000 Israeli settlers now live in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. The initiative follows a 2025 Security Cabinet decision to accelerate “legal and administrative annexation” of the occupied territories. Legal and Human Rights Implications for Palestinians Palestinian authorities have appealed to the United Nations, the International Criminal Court and other human‑rights bodies to halt the “illegal procedures” and hold Israel accountable for violations of Palestinian land rights. The digital registry, once entered into Israeli courts, could become difficult to challenge, effectively cementing Israeli claims over contested properties. What the Future Holds for West Bank Land Ownership If the registration proceeds as planned, the legal landscape of the West Bank could be reshaped, making future negotiations over land more complex. Analysts warn that the digital annexation may entrench settlement expansion and further limit Palestinian ability to claim ownership, potentially prompting increased international legal challenges and diplomatic pressure on Israel.
#Israel #Palestine #West Bank
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Health May 29, 2026

Israel's Mental Health Crisis: Trauma and Societal Transformation After Years of Conflict

Israel is facing a severe mental health crisis with rising PTSD cases, suicide rates, and societal …
Israel's Mental Health Crisis: Trauma and Societal TransformationAfter more than two years of relentless bombardment and war – from Israel's operations in Gaza and the Hamas-led assault on southern villages in October 2023 that preceded it, to the country's successive wars and strikes on Iran, Lebanon, Syria and other neighbouring states – analysts, observers, and numerous studies from within Israel have concluded that the country has become moulded by trauma.A recent survey by Maccabi Healthcare Services found that about one-third of Israelis believe they need professional mental health support. Among those who have served in the army, as either conscripts or reservists, the picture is even starker.Rising PTSD Cases and Mental Health EmergenciesIn January, Israel's Defence Ministry reported a near-40 percent rise in the number of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) cases among its soldiers since September 2023, with a 180 percent increase expected by 2028. The government has not published the number of soldiers discharged due to mental health over the same period, despite a legal obligation to do so, Israeli media has reported.Earlier this month, Magen David Adom, Israel's paramedic service, launched a dedicated mental health emergency service after registering a 45 percent spike in the number of calls it was receiving. The majority, it said, were linked to the continued strain of the country's multiple wars.The Statistical Surge in Mental Health IndicatorsThe number of suicides, a key indicator of mental health, has sharply increased across society as a whole, but particularly among the military, with 78 percent of military suicides in 2024 linked to combat operations in Gaza, the occupied West Bank and Lebanon, The Jerusalem Post reported in February.Incidents of domestic violence, as well as mental health conditions such as depression and stress, have all spiked since what many in the country regard as its endless series of wars began in October 2023, as well.Societal Brutalization and Political ShiftsIsrael's President, Isaac Herzog, appeared to acknowledge the trend in late May, referring to the increase in violence across Israeli society itself, including that perpetrated by rampaging Israelis from illegal settlements against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, and the spike in violence targeting Christians.Speaking at an awards ceremony, he said, "I wish I could speak today only about unity. But to my great sorrow, we are living through days in which violence is not the only thing rearing its head. Alongside it, at the margins of our magnificent Israeli society, a terrible process is creeping in – a terrible process of brutalisation. It is a slow and disturbing process, one that threatens to enter the mainstream of Israeli society, and we will not allow it.""October 7 was like a switch, and the trauma it caused is widespread and ongoing," Tuly Flint, an Israeli mental health practitioner and combat veteran, told Al Jazeera. "People's sense of security was shattered," he said, arguing that the gap between past conflicts and the present ones had created a false sense of safety, alongside misplaced confidence in Israel's military and technological superiority."People have lost confidence in their society, government and institutions," Flint said, describing the sense of institutional betrayal among those who relied on the state for protection, or the moral injury experienced by those who lived through the consequences of its failure to do so. "In some cases, this has led people to embrace right-wing politics, adopt a more forceful response to perceived threats, and lose trust in government," he added.Trauma's Long-Term Implications for Israel's FutureHowever, the degree to which these trends began on October 7, 2023, is unclear, analysts and observers say. Violence has been intrinsic to Israel since its founding in 1948, analysts, such as the noted Israeli sociologist Yehouda Shenhav-Shahrabani, told Al Jazeera, with the events following October 7 merely giving new impetus to existing currents."October 7 was like a new beginning," Shenhav-Shahrabani said. "People create beginnings to erase the trauma of the past. Giving trauma a start date helps explain it."Recounting a conversation he had with his friend, the late Lebanese novelist, Elias Khoury, who had described to him his idea that Israelis need to experience defeat to become "more human" and less hubristic, Shenhav-Shahrabani said, "I'm not sure that's happened. October 7 was a defeat, and since then, Israelis have become even more fascist."There was always a fascist element to zionism, but more liberal strands, such as kibbutzim, obscured it. However, since October 7, it's become more apparent. You can see it everywhere," Shenhav-Shahrabani, who has given up teaching in response to endless criticism from a growing number of right-wing students, said.How its current trauma will shape Israel going forward is unclear, Zahava Solomon, a professor at Tel Aviv University who has researched the phenomenon for the past 40 years, said.Trauma can motivate a society to be strong and aggressive, or to always seek negotiation, she said. For Israel, the past trauma of the Holocaust has, she said, instilled in society an absolute sense of victimhood, one imprinted upon its citizens from the cradle and for whom the mantra of "never again" has become second nature.As for the Palestinians, who have experienced their own victimhood, this carries "dire consequences" for the future.For Flint, however, still on the front line of managing the fallout from the wars' collective trauma, "There's no cure"."There's just recovery. Once people have crossed that threshold, that's it."
#Israel #Mental Health #PTSD
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Politics May 29, 2026

EU Expands Sanctions on Israeli Settlers, Targeting Extremist Groups in West Bank

The European Union added four entities and three individuals to its Global Human Rights Sanctions R…
EU Announces New Sanctions Targeting Extremist Israeli SettlersThe European Union announced on Thursday, 28 May 2026 that it is sanctioning four entities and three individuals it deems “extremist Israeli settlers” for “serious” human‑rights violations against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank.Specific Entities and Individuals Added to the Sanctions ListThe newly listed parties include:Nachala Settlement Movement and its director Daniella Weiss, accused of encouraging forced displacement of Palestinians.Israeli NGO Regavim and its director Meir Deutsch, cited for lobbying the demolition of Palestinian property and an EU‑funded primary school.NGO Hashomer Yosh and its president Avichai Suissa, linked to at least 28 violent outposts and settlements and the recruitment of armed volunteers.The Amana cooperative of the Gush Emunim settler movement, said to have played a key role in initiating, financing, and facilitating at least 30 violent outposts and settlements.Sanctions Scale: Cumulative Figures and Recent AdditionsWith these additions, the EU now sanctions 136 persons and 41 entities under its Global Human Rights Sanctions Regime, which was created in 2020. The regime covers acts such as genocide, crimes against humanity, and other serious violations.The latest round brings the total of newly sanctioned settlers to four entities and three individuals, following an earlier package announced earlier in May that also targeted Israeli settlers and Hamas leaders.Implications for the West Bank Conflict and EU Foreign PolicyThe sanctions mark a long‑awaited shift after a previous veto by Hungary’s illiberal government was lifted following the appointment of Prime Minister Peter Magyar. By targeting settler groups, the EU signals a stronger stance on settlement‑related violence, which has escalated since the start of Israel’s war in Gaza.Israel has condemned the measures, asserting a right to settle in the West Bank despite international‑law violations. The West Bank has seen the highest settlement expansion since 2017, and more than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed there according to UN figures.What May Follow: Potential Shifts in Regional DynamicsAnalysts expect the EU’s action could pressure the Israeli government to curb settler violence and reconsider expansion policies, especially as international scrutiny intensifies. Future EU steps may include further sanctions or diplomatic initiatives aimed at protecting Palestinian rights and stabilising the region.
#European Union #Israel #West Bank
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World Wide May 24, 2026

Israel blocks Gaza Muslims from performing Hajj pilgrimage for third year

For the third consecutive year, Israel has blocked Muslims from Gaza from performing the Hajj pilgr…
The Ongoing Blockade Hanan al-Hams was among the 3,000 Palestinians from Gaza scheduled to travel for the annual pilgrimage to Mecca in 2024. But her lifelong dream to perform Hajj, one of the five pillars of Islam, was shattered by Israel’s war on Gaza, launched on October 7, 2024. “I lost my son, my home was destroyed, and now I am deprived of the journey I waited decades for,” al-Hams, 65, told Al Jazeera, sitting inside a makeshift tent pitched over the ruins of her home in northern Gaza. Impact on Gaza's Pilgrims Entry and exit from Gaza were decided by Israel even before the war began. A partial opening in February of the Rafah crossing – the only connection to the outside world – has allowed passage only for patients who need medical treatments abroad. For any other travel requirement, including pilgrimage, study, and work, getting out of the enclave is near to impossible amid an Israeli land, air and sea blockade in place since 2007. Economic Consequences According to Gaza’s Ministry of Awqaf and Religious Affairs, more than 10,000 citizens have been prevented from performing Hajj over three years due to the Israeli shutdown of the Rafah crossing, which borders Egypt. At least 71 Hajj pilgrims, who had won the official draw in previous years, died during the Israeli war before they could perform the ritual, according to the Awqaf. A study published in May 2026 by the Palestinian Center for Political Studies (PCPS) describes the Israeli campaign against Gaza’s Hajj and Umrah sector as a “structural economic genocide”. The study reveals a complete collapse of all 78 licensed travel companies in the sector. Humanitarian Concerns The deprivation of Gaza’s pilgrims extends beyond border closures, revealing a systematic dismantling of the enclave’s religious tourism economy. The loss of this revenue has impacted more than 1,500 direct and indirect workers and their livelihoods. The PCPS report argues that the repeated targeting of the sector proves the destruction is an intentional policy rather than accidental collateral damage. Future Outlook Due to the blockade, the annual Hajj quota of around 3,000 is currently being filled by Palestinians holding Gaza IDs residing in Egypt and other countries. Thousands of spots have also been temporarily transferred to pilgrims from the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, with an official agreement to compensate Gaza with these numbers in future seasons. For now, however, thousands of Gaza’s elderly and sick remain trapped, holding onto fading hopes.
#Israel #Gaza #Hajj pilgrimage
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