NAKBA 2.0
Ali Sawafta
Fri, July 4, 2025
REUTERS





Palestinian Bedouins flee their homes, near Jericho
JORDAN VALLEY, West Bank (Reuters) -Thirty Palestinian families left their home in a remote area of the Israeli-occupied West Bank on Friday, saying they were forced out after years of persistent harassment and violence by Israeli settlers.
The families, members of the Bedouin Mleihat tribe from a shepherding community in the Jordan Valley, began dismantling homes built with iron sheets and wooden boards on Friday, overwhelmed by fears of further attacks.
"The settlers are armed and attack us, and the (Israeli) military protects them. We can’t do anything to stop them. We can’t take it anymore, so we decided to leave," said Mahmoud Mleihat, a 50-year-old father of seven from the community.
As the Palestinians took down their encampment, an Israeli settler armed with a rifle and several Israeli soldiers looked on.
Palestinian communities in the Jordan Valley, a sparsely populated region near the Jordan River, have faced escalating harassment from settlers in recent years, including violence.
Israeli human rights group B'Tselem has documented repeated acts of violence by Israeli settlers against Palestinians in Mu’arrajat, near Jericho, where the Mleihat tribe lives. In 2024, settlers armed with clubs stormed a Palestinian school, while in 2023, armed settlers blocked the path of vehicles carrying Palestinians, with some firing into the air and others hurling stones at the vehicles.
"We want to protect our children, and we’ve decided to leave," Mahmoud said, describing it as a great injustice.
He had lived in the community since he was 10, Mahmoud said.
Israel's military did not immediately respond to Reuters questions about the settler harassment faced by the Bedouin families or about the families leaving their community.
The Independent

Trump wants to cancel billions in spending for the UN. Why that’s bad news for Haiti
Miami Herald
Asked about settler violence in the West Bank, Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar told reporters on Monday that any acts of violence by civilians were unacceptable and that individuals should not take the law into their own hands.
Activists say Israeli settlement expansion has accelerated in recent years, displacing Palestinians, who have remained on their land under military occupation since Israel captured the West Bank in a 1967 war.
B'Tselem representative Sarit Michaeli said the Mleihat tribe had faced "intense settler violence" that included, theft, vandalism, and assault. This week, she said, the settlers had established an informal outpost near the Palestinians' home.
The military was failing to protect Palestinians from attacks by settlers, who she said acted with impunity.
Aaliyah Mleihat, 28, said the Bedouin community, which had lived there for 40 years, would now be scattered across different parts of the Jordan Valley, including nearby Jericho.
"People are demolishing their own homes with their own hands, leaving this village they’ve lived in for decades, the place where their dreams were built," she said, describing the forced displacement of 30 families as a "new Nakba".
The Nakba, meaning “catastrophe” in Arabic, refers to the mass displacement of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from their homes during 1948 at the birth of the state of Israel.
Most countries consider Israeli settlements a violation of the Geneva Conventions which ban settling civilians on occupied land; Israel says the settlements are lawful and justified by historic and biblical Jewish ties to the land.
(Writing by Alexander Cornwell, Editing by William Maclean)
German diplomats call for end to Israeli settler violence
DPA
Fri, July 4, 2025

German ambassador to Israel, Steffen Seibert, arrives at Bellevue Palace.
Palestinian Bedouins flee their homes, near Jericho
JORDAN VALLEY, West Bank (Reuters) -Thirty Palestinian families left their home in a remote area of the Israeli-occupied West Bank on Friday, saying they were forced out after years of persistent harassment and violence by Israeli settlers.
The families, members of the Bedouin Mleihat tribe from a shepherding community in the Jordan Valley, began dismantling homes built with iron sheets and wooden boards on Friday, overwhelmed by fears of further attacks.
"The settlers are armed and attack us, and the (Israeli) military protects them. We can’t do anything to stop them. We can’t take it anymore, so we decided to leave," said Mahmoud Mleihat, a 50-year-old father of seven from the community.
As the Palestinians took down their encampment, an Israeli settler armed with a rifle and several Israeli soldiers looked on.
Palestinian communities in the Jordan Valley, a sparsely populated region near the Jordan River, have faced escalating harassment from settlers in recent years, including violence.
Israeli human rights group B'Tselem has documented repeated acts of violence by Israeli settlers against Palestinians in Mu’arrajat, near Jericho, where the Mleihat tribe lives. In 2024, settlers armed with clubs stormed a Palestinian school, while in 2023, armed settlers blocked the path of vehicles carrying Palestinians, with some firing into the air and others hurling stones at the vehicles.
"We want to protect our children, and we’ve decided to leave," Mahmoud said, describing it as a great injustice.
He had lived in the community since he was 10, Mahmoud said.
Israel's military did not immediately respond to Reuters questions about the settler harassment faced by the Bedouin families or about the families leaving their community.
The Independent

Trump wants to cancel billions in spending for the UN. Why that’s bad news for Haiti
Miami Herald
Asked about settler violence in the West Bank, Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar told reporters on Monday that any acts of violence by civilians were unacceptable and that individuals should not take the law into their own hands.
Activists say Israeli settlement expansion has accelerated in recent years, displacing Palestinians, who have remained on their land under military occupation since Israel captured the West Bank in a 1967 war.
B'Tselem representative Sarit Michaeli said the Mleihat tribe had faced "intense settler violence" that included, theft, vandalism, and assault. This week, she said, the settlers had established an informal outpost near the Palestinians' home.
The military was failing to protect Palestinians from attacks by settlers, who she said acted with impunity.
Aaliyah Mleihat, 28, said the Bedouin community, which had lived there for 40 years, would now be scattered across different parts of the Jordan Valley, including nearby Jericho.
"People are demolishing their own homes with their own hands, leaving this village they’ve lived in for decades, the place where their dreams were built," she said, describing the forced displacement of 30 families as a "new Nakba".
The Nakba, meaning “catastrophe” in Arabic, refers to the mass displacement of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from their homes during 1948 at the birth of the state of Israel.
Most countries consider Israeli settlements a violation of the Geneva Conventions which ban settling civilians on occupied land; Israel says the settlements are lawful and justified by historic and biblical Jewish ties to the land.
(Writing by Alexander Cornwell, Editing by William Maclean)
German diplomats call for end to Israeli settler violence
DPA
Fri, July 4, 2025
German ambassador to Israel, Steffen Seibert, arrives at Bellevue Palace.
Bernd von Jutrczenka/dpa
Germany's ambassador to Israel on Friday condemned the aggression of Jewish settlers against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank.
"Extremist settler violence is not only reprehensible when they target [Israel Defense Forces] reservists. They harass and attack Palestinian communities regularly and this needs to be stopped," Steffen Seibert posted in English on X.
Seibert was responding to a posting on the same channel by Oliver Owcza, head of the German diplomatic mission in Ramallah.
"Escalating settler violence and the resulting pressure on local communities have led to an increasing number of displacements," Owcza wrote. "This violates essential rights of these communities and needs to stop urgently!"
Since the massacre by the Palestinian militia Hamas in southern Israel on October 7, 2023, and the resulting Gaza war, Jewish settlers have stepped up attacks on Palestinians in the West Bank.
They repeatedly advance into Palestinian villages with firearms, baseball bats and stones, set fire to houses and cars and set fields and olive groves on fire.
Israeli media and eyewitnesses report that the Israeli armed forces are intervening less and less and are backing up the attackers.
"Extremist settler violence is not only reprehensible when they target [Israel Defense Forces] reservists. They harass and attack Palestinian communities regularly and this needs to be stopped," Steffen Seibert posted in English on X.
Seibert was responding to a posting on the same channel by Oliver Owcza, head of the German diplomatic mission in Ramallah.
"Escalating settler violence and the resulting pressure on local communities have led to an increasing number of displacements," Owcza wrote. "This violates essential rights of these communities and needs to stop urgently!"
Since the massacre by the Palestinian militia Hamas in southern Israel on October 7, 2023, and the resulting Gaza war, Jewish settlers have stepped up attacks on Palestinians in the West Bank.
They repeatedly advance into Palestinian villages with firearms, baseball bats and stones, set fire to houses and cars and set fields and olive groves on fire.
Israeli media and eyewitnesses report that the Israeli armed forces are intervening less and less and are backing up the attackers.
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