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AL-MUGHAYYIR: Toys are scattered amid charred objects inside a house in the aftermath of an attack by Zionist settlers in occupied West Bank village of  Al-Mughayyir on April 17, 2024. — AFP photos
AL-MUGHAYYIR: Toys are scattered amid charred objects inside a house in the aftermath of an attack by Zionist settlers in occupied West Bank village of Al-Mughayyir on April 17, 2024. — AFP photos
Violent Zionist settler attacks terrorize villagers in West Bank
Zionist army protects attackers, locks up 70 Palestinians who tried to defend their community

AL-MUGHAYYIR: Sitting around a fire in the hills of the Zionist-occupied West Bank, Ibrahim Abu Alyah and some friends stood watch over his herd in the aftermath of a settler raid on their village. “We are here so that we can put away the sheep and tell people to protect their homes in case settlers come,” Abu Alyah told AFP.

After 14-year-old Benjamin Achimeir went missing on April 12 in the nearby illegal settler outpost of Malachi Hashalom, dozens of Jewish settlers stormed his village of Al-Mughayyir, north of Ramallah. Armed with rifles and Molotov cocktails, they set houses ablaze, killed sheep, wounded 23 people and displaced 86, according to the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, OCHA.

One Palestinian was also killed in the violence. Abu Alyah, a shepherd, lost “20 or 30 sheep” and the cash he made from selling milk products when his house was set alight. Al-Mughayyir mayor Amin Abu Alyah said the settlers, who were part of the search party for Achimeir, burnt “everything they found in front of them” including houses, a bulldozer and vehicles.

Several people tried to organize protection committees to defend themselves from raids, but were prevented from doing so, he said. “We currently have more than 70 prisoners inside (Zionist) prisons on charges of joining protection committees or trying to form an organized body,” he said.

DUMA: People stand amid the damage caused by Zionist settlers storming the Palestinian village of Duma and setting buildings on fire.
DUMA: People stand amid the damage caused by Zionist settlers storming the Palestinian village of Duma and setting buildings on fire.

Duma, struck twice

In the nearby village of Duma, north of Al-Mughayyir, old fears came true when hundreds of settlers came down through the surrounding fields on Saturday. That day, Achimeir’s body was found bearing marks of a stabbing attack. People watched powerless as settlers rampaged through the village.

“Hundreds of settlers entered the village followed by more than 300 (Zionist) soldiers who stormed the village and declared it a closed military zone,” Suleiman Dawabsha, head of Duma’s village council, told AFP. The Zionist army has not specified details of the events concerning the killing of Achimeir. It also has not commented on Dawabsha’s accusation of soldiers storming the village along with the settlers.

Mahmud Salawdeh, a 30-year-old iron worker whose house was torched, felt vulnerable when he realized the soldiers were not stopping the attack. “We feel helpless because we are unable to protect ourselves, and the settlers are protected by the army,” he said. “I lost all my money and my future,” he added from the ground floor of his charred house on the outskirts of Duma, near the fields the attackers came through.

At his feet, burnt furniture and shattered glass covered the floor, while walls black with soot served as a reminder of the firebombs thrown at the building. His workshop in the adjacent room was torched and charred remnants of old tools lay around, while a large wooden box where he had been raising 70 chicks was now empty.

The incident opened old wounds for Duma residents, who still remember the tragedy that struck another Dawabsha household. In 2015, their family home was set ablaze by a settler extremist, killing the parents and their toddler, and leaving only one surviving member, four-year-old Ahmed.

‘We will never leave’

Duma residents, like many West Bank villagers, say they are protected neither by Palestinian security, which is only allowed to operate in 40 percent of the territory, nor by the Zionist entity, which controls the rest. Zionist soldiers do not always restrain settlers from attacking Palestinians, OCHA said.

In January, “in nearly half of all recorded incidents (of settler violence) after 7 October, (Zionist) forces were either accompanying or reported to be supporting the attackers,” it said. OCHA recorded 774 instances of Zionist settler attacks against Palestinians since October 7, and said 37 communities had been affected by violence between April 9 and 15, “triple the number” of the preceding week.

Nine Zionists, including five in the Zionist forces, were killed in the West Bank over the same timeframe, OCHA said. At least 469 Palestinians have been killed by Zionist troops or settlers in the West Bank since the start of the Zionist war in Gaza, according to Palestinian official figures.

The West Bank, occupied by the Zionist entity since 1967, has seen a surge in violence since early last year, which has intensified since the Zionists launched their military campaign in Gaza after the Hamas attack.

Despite the hardships, “we will never leave”, herder Abu Alyah told AFP. But the 29-year-old already had to move from his former herding grounds on the other side of Al-Mughayyir, closer to the settlement outpost, in September.

The weekend’s attacks marked a peak in violence due to the sheer number of people who took part in them, but also reflects a wider trend in the West Bank, NGOs said. “It is clear that the escalation of violence in the West Bank has occurred in tandem with the crisis in Gaza,” charity ActionAid said. On Wednesday evening, settlers were planting Zionist flags along the road that runs between Al-Mughayyir and Malachi Hashalom. — AFP

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