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{{Short description|Attacks targeting Palestinians in the West Bank}}
{{POV|date=March 2010}}
{{pp|small=yes}}{{use dmy dates|date=December 2024}}
'''Israeli settler violence''' refers to acts of violence committed by some ] and supporters and ] who live in the ] as well as against Israeli security forces in this area. Although the vast majority of West Bank settlers are law abiding, there is a rise in violent acts by extremist settlers against IDF troops and neighboring Palestinians.<ref name="Pfeffer">Top IDF officer warns: Settlers' radical fringe growing, By Anshel Pfeffer, Haaretz 20.10.09</ref> As of 2008, the number of Jewish settlers involved in violent acts is estimated to be a few hundreds, out of a total population of about 500,000<ref name="bbc1"/>. Prominent Jewish religious figures living in the occupied territories, as well as Israeli government officials, have condemned and expressed outrage over incidents of such behaviour.<ref name="ynetnews.com"></ref> In the years 2008-2009, the defense establishment has began taking a harder line against unruly settlers.<ref name="Pfeffer"/>
] sought to escort Palestinian children home from school.<ref name="palsolidarity">{{cite web | url=http://palsolidarity.org/2006/11/hebron-day-06/ | title=Swedish human rights worker viciously attacked by Jewish extremists in Hebron | date=November 18, 2006 | access-date=October 28, 2015}}</ref><ref name="dailystar-amnesty">{{cite web | url=http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Lebanon-News/2007/May-24/46102-amnesty-internationals-annual-report-on-israel-and-the-occupied-territories.ashx | title=Amnesty International's annual report on Israel and the Occupied Territories | date=May 24, 2007 | access-date=October 28, 2015}}</ref>]]


] are the target of violence by ] and their supporters, predominantly in the ]. In November 2021, Israeli Defense Minister ] discussed the steep rise in the number of incidents between settlers and Palestinians in the West Bank, many of which result from attacks by residents of illegal settler outposts on Palestinians from neighboring villages.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-settler-attacks-on-palestinian-spike-reflecting-israel-s-systemic-failure-1.10399019|title=Settler Attacks on Palestinian Spike, Reflecting Israel's Systemic Failure|newspaper=Haaretz|first=Amos|last=Harel|date=19 November 2021|access-date=21 November 2023}}</ref> Settler violence also includes acts known as ] that are in response to actions by the Israeli government, usually against Palestinian targets and occasionally against ] in the West Bank.<ref name="bbcrising">{{cite news | url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-15753945 | title=Concerns over rising settler violence in the West Bank | publisher=BBC|first=Jon|last=Donnison | date=17 November 2011 | access-date=March 25, 2012}}</ref>
==Israel's settlement policy==
], September 2024]]
] (lighter pink) where access by Palestinians was closed or restricted at the time. Source: United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, January 2006.]]


Palestinian police are forbidden from reacting to acts of violence by Israeli settlers, a fact which diminishes their credibility among Palestinians.<ref>Daniel Byman, Oxford University Press/Saban Center, Brookings Institution, 2011 p. 292: 'Palestinian police are barred from responding to settler violence. This policy reduces friction between settlers and Palestinian authorities, but it decreases the overall credibility of the PA, which cannot defend its people from settler harassment and violence.'</ref> Between January and November 2008, 515 criminal suits were opened by Israel against settlers for violence against Arabs or Israeli security forces; 502 of these involved "right wing radicals" while 13 involved "left wing anarchists".<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/violence-extremists-jewish-settler-movement-rising-challenge | title=Violence by Extremists in the Jewish Settler Movement: A Rising Challenge | publisher=The Washington Institute for Near East Policy | date=November 25, 2008 | access-date=March 26, 2012}}</ref><ref>Constance B. Hilliard'', Does Israel have a future?: the case for a post-Zionist state'', Potomac Books, Inc., 2009 p. 59.</ref> In 2008, the senior Israeli commander in the West Bank said that a hard core of a few hundred activists were involved in violence against the Palestinians and Israeli soldiers.<ref name="bbc1"/> Some prominent Jewish religious figures living in the occupied territories, as well as Israeli government officials, have condemned and expressed outrage over such behavior,<ref name="ynetnews.com">{{cite news|url=http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3725186,00.html |title=Rabbi slams Jewish 'hooligans' - Israel News, Ynetnews |newspaper=Ynetnews |publisher=Ynetnews.com |date=1995-06-20 |access-date=2012-09-14|last1=Weiss |first1=Efrat }}</ref> while religious justifications for settler killings have also been given.<ref>Amitai Etzioni, Yale University Press, 2008 p. 119.:'Others have justified violence against Arabs by citing the rule from the Talmud: "If a man comes to kill you, rise early, and kill him first."</ref> Israeli media said the defense establishment began taking a harder line against unruly settlers starting in 2008.<ref name="Pfeffer"/> In 2011 the BBC reported that "vast majority of settlers are non-violent but some within the Israeli government acknowledge a growing problem with extremists."<ref name="bbcrising"/> UN figures from 2011 showed that 90% of complaints filed against settlers by Palestinians with the Israeli police never led to indictment.<ref name="bbcrising"/>
Israel has justified its civilian settlements by stating that a temporary use of land and buildings for various purposes appears permissible under a plea of military necessity and that the settlements fulfilled security needs.<ref>See for example Kretzmer, David "The occupation of justice: the Supreme Court of Israel and the Occupied Territories, SUNY Press, 2002, ISBN 0791453375, 9780791453377, page 83</ref> The United Nations affirmed the principle of international law that the continuation of colonialism in all its forms and manifestations is a crime and that colonial peoples have the inherent right to struggle by all necessary means at their disposal against colonial Powers and alien domination in exercise of their right of self-determination.<ref>See General Assembly Resolution 3103, 12 December 1973, "Basic Principles Of The Legal Status Of The Combatants Struggling Against Colonial And Alien Domination And Racist Regimes" and United Nations General Assembly Resolution 39/17, 23 November 1984, "Universal realization of the rights to self-determination"</ref> National liberation struggles are categorized as international armed conflicts by Article 1(4) of the Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949 to which the majority of states (including the Western states) are parties.<ref>See Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, and relating to the Protection of Victims of International Armed Conflicts (Protocol I), 8 June 1977 </ref><ref>Hillier, Tim "Sourcebook on public international law", Routledge, 1998, ISBN 1859410502, 9781859410509, page 627-628</ref> The International Court of Justice concluded that Israel had breached its obligations under international law by establishing settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem and that Israel cannot rely on a right of self-defence or on a state of necessity in order to preclude the wrongfulness of imposing a régime, which is contrary to international law. The Court also concluded that the Israeli régime violates the basic human rights of the Palestinians by impeding the liberty of movement of the inhabitants of the Occupied Palestinian Territory (with the exception of lsraeli citizens) and their exercise of the right to work, to health, to education and to an adequate standard of living.<ref>See the Judgment in "Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory", para 120, 134, and 142 and PAUL J. I. M. DE WAART (2005) International Court of Justice Firmly Walled in the Law of Power in the Israeli–Palestinian Peace Process. Leiden Journal of International Law, 18, pp 467-487, doi:10.1017/S0922156505002839</ref>

In the 21st century, there has been a steady increase in violence and terror perpetrated by Israeli settlers against Palestinians.<ref name="Pfeffer">Anshel Pfeffer,, ] 20 October 2009.</ref> In 2012, an EU heads of mission report found that settler violence had more than tripled in the three years up to 2011.<ref name="GnIT">{{cite news | last = Hider | first = James | date = March 21, 2012 | title = Israel 'turning blind eye' to West Bank settlers' attacks on Palestinians | work = ] | url = https://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/mar/21/israel-settlers-violence-palestinians-europe | access-date = March 23, 2012 | location=London}}</ref> ] (OCHA) figures state that the annual rate of settler attacks (2,100 attacks in 8 years) has almost quadrupled between 2006 and 2014.<ref>Chaim Levinson, Gili Cohen and Jack Khoury , at Haaretz, 15 January 2014. 'The annual totals are up from 115 in 2006 to 399 in 2013..'</ref> In 2021, there was yet another wave of settler violence which erupted after a 16-year-old settler died in a car chase with ] after having hurled rocks at Palestinians. So far it has resulted in 44 incidents in the span of a few weeks, injuring two Palestinian children.<ref>Times of Israel Staff. “5-Year-Old Palestinian Boy Hurt by Rock Thrown at Car in Reported Settler Attack.” The Times of Israel, January 22, 2021. </ref> In the latter parts of 2021, there has been a marked increase in settler violence toward Palestinians, condemned at the United Nations Security Council.

This violence increased further following the election of a far-right government in 2022 which proposed to expand Israeli settlements in Palestinian territories, as well as the ] on 7 October 2023. In October 2024 ] reported that there were 1,423 recorded incidents of settler violence in the west bank since 7 October, with 321 incidents, ], 319 incidents in ] and 298 in ].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Duggal |first=Hanna |last2=Ali |first2=Marium |title=Mapping 1,400 settler attacks in the occupied West Bank over the past year |url=https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/10/10/mapping-1400-settler-attacks-in-the-occupied-west-bank-over-the-past-year |access-date=2024-10-10 |website=Al Jazeera |language=en}}</ref>

==History==

Physical violence by settlers against Palestinians in the West Bank started in a systematic manner in 1980, as some religious settlers created a secret organization later referred to as "the ]". This group was captured by Israeli law enforcement authorities in 1984. Settler violence received a new boost following the Oslo agreement in 1993. In late 2022, far-right leaders of the Israeli settlement movement were elected into the government of Israel and appointed as prominent ministers; in early 2023, Israeli settler violence increased, which included the ] of February 2023.<ref name=Taha/><ref name=":2">{{Cite web |date=12 April 2024 |title=Hunt for Israel teen missing in West Bank turns violent |url=https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20240412-hunt-for-israel-teen-missing-in-west-bank-turns-violent |access-date=13 April 2024 |website=] |language=en}}</ref> In October 2023, the outbreak of the ] was accompanied by a further escalation in Israeli settler violence in the West Bank.<ref name=Taha>{{cite news |last1=McKernan |first1=Bethan |last2=Taha |first2=Sufian |work=] |title='Nowhere is safe': Fear and mourning inside the West Bank villages where Israeli settlers went on the rampage |url=https://theguardian.com/world/2024/apr/20/nowhere-is-safe-fear-and-mourning-inside-the-west-bank-villages-where-israeli-settlers-went-on-the-rampage |access-date=24 April 2024 |date=20 April 2024}}</ref> <ref name=":7">{{Cite web |last=Mackintosh |first=Thomas |date=13 April 2024 |title=Body of Israeli shepherd, 14, found in West Bank |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-68806205 |access-date=13 April 2024 |website=] |language=en-GB}}</ref> After the war began, the settlers "have acted with near-impunity", wrote BBC News in May 2024.<ref name=beasts>{{cite news |last1=Gunter |first1=Joel |first2=Muath |last2=Al-Khatib |title='Exterminate the beasts': How Israeli settlers took revenge for a murder in the West Bank |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-69052857 |access-date=28 May 2024 |work=BBC News |date=27 May 2024}}</ref><ref name=":8">{{Cite web |last=Nasser |first=Nasser |last2=Jeffery |first2=Jack |date=13 April 2024 |title=Israel finds the body of a teen whose disappearance sparked a deadly settler attack in the West Bank |url=https://apnews.com/article/israel-palestinians-gaza-west-bank-7e75e1ef8f5307946d24f8b9a190fd66 |access-date=13 April 2024 |website=] |language=en}}</ref>

In April 2024, Israeli settlers rampaged through Palestinian villages in the ] after the ].<ref name=rampage>Multiple sources:
*{{cite news |last1=Nasser |first1=Nasser |last2=Jeffery |first2=Jack |title=West Bank sees biggest settler rampage since war in Gaza began as Israeli teen’s body is found |url=https://apnews.com/article/israel-palestinians-gaza-west-bank-7e75e1ef8f5307946d24f8b9a190fd66 |access-date=22 April 2024 |work=]}}
*{{cite news |title=West Bank villagers vigilant but vulnerable after settler attacks |url=https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20240419-west-bank-villagers-vigilant-but-vulnerable-after-settler-attacks |access-date=22 April 2024 |work=] |agency=] |date=19 April 2024}}
*{{cite news |last1=Sawafta |first1=Ali |title=Three Palestinians killed in West Bank military raids and settler rampage }}</ref> In total, 11 Palestinian villages were attacked, four Palestinians were shot dead and thousands of animals were killed, while a dozen homes and over 100 cars were burned.<ref name=beasts/> ], citing messages from Israeli settlers' ] groups and testimony from Palestinian villagers and officials, described the rampage as appearing to be a "organised campaign of revenge … carried out by co-ordinated groups on the ground, and targeted against ordinary Palestinians with no apparent connection to the murder of Benjamin Achimeir other than the bad luck of living nearby."<ref name=beasts/>

==Israel's settlement policy==
] (lighter pink) where access by Palestinians was closed or restricted at the time. Source: United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, January 2006.]]
Israel has justified its civilian settlements by stating the territories in question are ], and that a temporary use of land and buildings for various purposes appears permissible under a plea of military necessity and that the settlements fulfilled security needs.<ref>See for example Kretzmer, David, "The occupation of justice: the Supreme Court of Israel and the Occupied Territories, SUNY Press, 2002, {{ISBN|0-7914-5337-5}}, {{ISBN|978-0-7914-5337-7}}, page 83</ref> The United Nations affirmed the principle of international law that the continuation of colonialism in all its forms and manifestations is a crime and that colonial peoples have the inherent right to struggle by all necessary means at their disposal against colonial powers and alien domination in exercise of their right of self-determination.<ref>See General Assembly Resolution 3103, 12 December 1973, "Basic Principles Of The Legal Status Of The Combatants Struggling Against Colonial And Alien Domination And Racist Regimes" and United Nations General Assembly Resolution 39/17, 23 November 1984, "Universal realization of the rights to self-determination"</ref> National liberation struggles are categorized as international armed conflicts by Article 1(4) of the Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949 to which the majority of states (including the Western states) are parties.<ref>See Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, and relating to the Protection of Victims of International Armed Conflicts (Protocol I), 8 June 1977 </ref><ref>Hillier, Tim "Sourcebook on public international law", Routledge, 1998, {{ISBN|1-85941-050-2}}, {{ISBN|978-1-85941-050-9}}, page 627-628</ref> The International Court of Justice concluded that Israel had breached its obligations under international law by establishing settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and that Israel cannot rely on a right of self-defence or on a state of necessity in order to preclude the wrongfulness of imposing a régime, which is contrary to international law. The Court also concluded that the Israeli régime violates the basic human rights of the Palestinians by impeding the liberty of movement of the inhabitants of the Occupied Palestinian Territory (with the exception of Israeli citizens) and their exercise of the right to work, to health, to education and to an adequate standard of living.<ref>See the Judgment in "Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory", para 120, 134, and 142 {{cite web |url=http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/files/131/1671.pdf |title=Archived copy |access-date=2010-07-06 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100706021237/http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/files/131/1671.pdf |archive-date=2010-07-06 }} and PAUL J. I. M. DE WAART (2005) International Court of Justice Firmly Walled in the Law of Power in the Israeli-Palestinian Peace Process. Leiden Journal of International Law, 18, pp 467-487, {{doi|10.1017/S0922156505002839}}</ref>


In Hebron, where 500-600 settlers live among 167,000 Palestinians, B'Tselem argues that there have been "grave violations" of Palestinian human rights because of the "presence of the settlers within the city." The organization cites regular incidents of "almost daily physical violence and property damage by settlers in the city", curfews and restrictions of movement that are "among the harshest in the Occupied Territories", and violence and by Israeli border policemen and the IDF against Palestinians who live in the city's ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.btselem.org/English/Publications/Summaries/200308_Hebron_Area_H2.asp |title=Hebron, Area H-2: Settlements Cause Mass Departure of Palestinians }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://hrw.org/english/docs/2001/04/11/isrlpa241.htm |title=Mounting Human Rights Crisis in Hebron}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=331234&contrassID=2&subContrassID=1&sbSubContrassID=0&listSrc=Y |title=Israeli human rights group slams Hebron settlers}}</ref> In Hebron, where 500-600 settlers live among 167,000 Palestinians, B'Tselem argues that there have been "grave violations" of Palestinian human rights because of the "presence of the settlers within the city". The organization cites regular incidents of "almost daily physical violence and property damage by settlers in the city", curfews and restrictions of movement that are "among the harshest in the Occupied Territories", and violence by Israeli border policemen and the IDF against Palestinians who live in the city's ].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.btselem.org/publications/summaries/200308_hebron_area_h2|title=Hebron, Area H-2|website=B'Tselem}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://hrw.org/english/docs/2001/04/11/isrlpa241.htm |title=Mounting Human Rights Crisis in Hebron |access-date=2009-04-18 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081115080658/http://hrw.org/english/docs/2001/04/11/isrlpa241.htm |archive-date=2008-11-15 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=331234&contrassID=2&subContrassID=1&sbSubContrassID=0&listSrc=Y|title=Israeli human rights group slams Hebron settlers}}</ref>


] reports on ], including, "frequent stoning and shooting at Palestinian cars. In many cases, settlers abuse Palestinians in front of Israeli soldiers or police with little interference from the authorities."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hrw.org/english/docs/2001/02/27/isrlpa254.htm |title=Israel: Palestinian Drivers Routinely Abused}}</ref> ] reports on physical violence against Palestinians by settlers, including, "frequent stoning and shooting at Palestinian cars. In many cases, settlers abuse Palestinians in front of Israeli soldiers or police with little interference from the authorities."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2001/02/26/israel-palestinian-drivers-routinely-abused|title=Israel: Palestinian Drivers Routinely Abused|website=hrw.org|publisher=Human Rights Watch|date=February 26, 2001|access-date=21 November 2023}}</ref>


B'Tselem also says that settler actions include "blocking roadways, so as to impede Palestinian life and commerce. The settlers also shoot solar panels on roofs of buildings, torch automobiles, shatter windowpanes and windshields, destroy crops, uproot trees, abuse merchants and owners of stalls in the market. Some of these actions are intended to force Palestinians to leave their homes and farmland, and thereby enable the settlers to gain control of them."<ref name="NotV">{{cite web|url=http://www.btselem.org/english/Settler_Violence/Nature_of_the_Violence.asp |title=The Nature of Settler Violence |accessdate=2008-02-15}}</ref> B'Tselem also says that settler actions include "blocking roadways, so as to impede Palestinian life and commerce. The settlers also shoot solar panels on roofs of buildings, torch automobiles, shatter windowpanes and windshields, destroy crops, uproot trees, abuse merchants and owners of stalls in the market. Some of these actions are intended to force Palestinians to leave their homes and farmland, and thereby enable the settlers to gain control of them."<ref name="NotV">{{cite web |url=http://www.btselem.org/english/Settler_Violence/Nature_of_the_Violence.asp |title=The Nature of Settler Violence |access-date=2008-02-15 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110605020226/http://www.btselem.org/english/Settler_Violence/Nature_of_the_Violence.asp |archive-date=2011-06-05 |url-status=dead }}</ref>


==Causes of violence== ==Causes of violence==
When an 11-year-old Palestinian girl from Nablus was killed by settlers in 1983, in their defense, the chief rabbi of the Sephardic community reportedly cited a ]ic text justifying killing an enemy on occasions when one may see from a child's perspective that he or she will grow up to become your enemy.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/hatecrimeglobalp00prof|url-access=registration|page=|title=Hate Crime: The Global Politics of Polarization|last1=Kelly|first1=Robert J.|last2=Maghan|first2=Jess|date=1998|publisher=SIU Press|isbn=9780809322107|language=en}}</ref> Rabbis have been asked by settler militants to provide rulings to justify acts that are aimed to block peace with, or the return of land to, Palestinians.<ref>Daniel Byman, Oxford University Press, 2011 p. 289.</ref> The theft of Palestinian olive harvests has been justified by some rabbis. Former chief rabbi ] stated that: "Since the land is the inheritance of the People of Israel, planting on this land by gentiles is planting on land that does not belong to them. If someone puts a tree on my land, both the tree and the fruit it yields belongs to me."<ref>], , Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2003 p. 385.</ref> Some rabbinical extremists cite the biblical edict to exterminate the ] to justify both expelling Palestinians from the land and killing Arab civilians in wartime.<ref>], Pluto Press, 2000 p. 118.</ref>
Ghassan Daghlas, a Palestinian Authority official who deals with the settlements issue in the northern West Bank said, ''These groups of settlers are organised and support each other...If there’s an outpost evacuation, they call people from Hebron to Jenin to stop the Palestinians working on their lands''. Michael Sfard, a lawyer with ], an Israeli human rights group which monitors the violation of human rights in the ], stated that there are between a few dozen and a few hundred extremist settlers using a tactic called ''Price Tagging'', if the Government sends police or soldiers to dismantle an outpost that is being built, the settlers make the Palestinian population pay the price. While people in the outpost are confronting the security forces, others start harassing Palestinians forcing commanders to divert men from the outpost and making them think twice about launching future operations. ''It’s such a big headache that many of the relevant authorities give up without trying'' and the outposts are quickly rebuilt once the army gives up and leaves.<ref name="Price Tag">{{cite news | last = Hider | first = James | date = October 15, 2009 | title = West Bank settlers use ‘price tag’ tactic to punish Palestinians | work = ] | url = http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article6875304.ece | accessdate = October 16, 2009 | location=London}}</ref>


One of the causes of violence is settler ] action in response to, usually unrelated, acts of ] violence.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-dRUGqwLSE4C&pg=PA158|title=The Israeli-Palestinian War: Escalating to Nowhere|last1=Cordesman|first1=Anthony H.|last2=Moravitz|first2=Jennifer|date=2005-01-01|publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group|isbn=9780275987589|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Pedahzur|first1=Ami|last2=Perliger|first2=Arie|date=2003-09-01|title=The causes of vigilante political violence: The case of Jewish settlers|journal=Civil Wars|volume=6|issue=3|pages=9–30|doi=10.1080/13698240308402542|s2cid=143893087|issn=1369-8249}}</ref>
Many Israeli settlers believe that their religion entitles them to the land of biblical Israel. According to a 2003 survey, nearly 40% of settlers in the West Bank "live there out of a belief in a divinely ordained mission to inhabit the land"<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/3144791.stm |title=Israel's religious settlers |first=Raffi |last=Berg |date=2003-08-18 | work=BBC News}}</ref>.


Human rights group ] says that the violence is "a means to harass and intimidate Palestinians" and that the evacuations are a necessary part of the peace process. According to B'Tselem that when a building is evacuated by the Israeli government, settlers lash out at Palestinians because they're "easy victims" and as a means to widen the area under settler control.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.coxwashington.com/hp/content/reporters/stories/2008/07/8/17/2008/08/25/ISRAEL_SETTLERCRIME17_COX.html |title=Settlers Increase Attacks On Palestinians In West Bank |first=Robert W. |last=Gee |date=2008-08-25}}</ref> Human rights group ] says that the violence is "a means to harass and intimidate Palestinians" and that the evacuations are a necessary part of the peace process. According to B'Tselem, when a building is evacuated by the Israeli government, settlers lash out at Palestinians because they're "easy victims" and as a means to widen the area under settler control.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.coxwashington.com/hp/content/reporters/stories/2008/07/8/17/2008/08/25/ISRAEL_SETTLERCRIME17_COX.html |title=Settlers Increase Attacks On Palestinians In West Bank |first=Robert W. |last=Gee |date=2008-08-25 }}{{Dead link|date=January 2020 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>


Ghassan Daghlas, a Palestinian Authority official who deals with the settlements issue in the northern West Bank, said, "These groups of settlers are organised and support each other...If there’s an outpost evacuation, they call people from Hebron to Jenin to stop the Palestinians working on their lands". Michael Sfard, a lawyer with ], an Israeli human rights group which monitors the violation of human rights in the ], stated that there are between a few dozen and a few hundred extremist settlers using a tactic called ]: if the government sends police or soldiers to dismantle an outpost that is being built, the settlers make the Palestinian population pay the price. While people in the outpost are confronting the security forces, others start harassing Palestinians, forcing commanders to divert men from the outpost and making them think twice about launching future operations. It’s such a big headache that many of the relevant authorities give up without trying and the outposts are quickly rebuilt once the army gives up and leaves.<ref name="Price Tag">{{cite news | last = Hider | first = James | date = October 15, 2009 | title = West Bank settlers use 'price tag' tactic to punish Palestinians | work = ] | url = http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article6875304.ece | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110716091837/http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article6875304.ece | url-status = dead | archive-date = July 16, 2011 | access-date = October 16, 2009 | location=London}}</ref>
==Criticism of Violence by Settler Leaders==
The Violence by extremist settlers against Palestinians has been harshly condemned by some of the leading religious figures in the West Bank, including Rabbi ] of ], who said: "Targeting Palestinians and their property is a shocking thing, (...) It's an act of hurting humanity. (...) This builds a wall of fire between Jews and Arabs."<ref name="ynetnews.com"/>


==Criticism of violence by settler leaders==
The ] and former Knesset member ] has also condemned violence against Palestinians. “The ‘price tag’ response is immoral,” Porat said. “It’s unheard of that one needs to burn the vineyards and fields of Arabs. It’s immoral…and it gives legitimacy to those who are interested in undermining the outpost issue. It’s a very grave matter.”<ref>Israel - Rabbi Harshly Condemns Violence by Jewish Hooligans Against Arabs, 2 Jun 2009</ref>
The violence by extremist settlers against Palestinians has been condemned by leading religious, political and municipal figures in the West Bank, including Rabbi ] of ], who said: "Targeting Palestinians and their property is a shocking thing, (...) It's an act of hurting humanity. (...) This builds a wall of fire between Jews and Arabs."<ref name="ynetnews.com"/> According to former Israeli Defense Minister ], "most of those extreme right wing activists" are not settlers and do not represent the settlements community.<ref>{{cite news|title=Ya'alon: we know who are the assailants at Duma|issue=994|publisher=Makor Rishon|date=September 11, 2015|page=8|quote=It is necessary to know that most of those extreme right wing activists are not residents of Judea and Samaria and they definitely don't represent the settler-communities over there.}}</ref>


The ] and former Knesset member ] has also condemned violence against Palestinians. "The 'price tag' response is immoral", Porat said. "It's unheard of that one needs to burn the vineyards and fields of Arabs. It's immoral ... and it gives legitimacy to those who are interested in undermining the outpost issue. It's a very grave matter."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://vinnews.com/2009/06/02/israel-rabbi-harshly-condemns-violence-by-jewish-hooligans-against-arabs/|title=Israel - Rabbi Harshly Condemns Violence by Jewish Hooligans Against Arabs|website=vinnews.com|date=June 2, 2009|access-date=6 November 2023}}</ref>
] is the umbrella organization of municipal councils of Jewish settlements in the West Bank. The council chairman ] said that settlers must not use violence to advance their means. He said that such actions were "morally bankrupt" and only serve to "hinder the settlers' struggle."<ref>, Jerusalem Post 12/08/2009</ref>

] is the umbrella organization of municipal councils of Jewish settlements in the West Bank. Council chairman ] said that settlers must not use violence to advance their means. He said that such actions were "]" and serve only to "hinder the settlers' struggle".<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.jpost.com/Home/Article.aspx?id=162620|title=Yesha Council chair Dayan condemns recent settler violence|work=The Jerusalem Post|date=8 December 2009|access-date=6 November 2023}}</ref>


==Differing legal status and treatment of Israeli settlers and Palestinians== ==Differing legal status and treatment of Israeli settlers and Palestinians==
Unlike Palestinians, Israeli civilians living in the Palestinian Territories are not subject to military or local law, but are prosecuted according to Israeli penal law. This originates in the Emergency Regulations bill enacted in 1967 and extended since which gives ] to Israelis in the occupied territories. B'TSelem has said that the difference in legal status of Israelis and Palestinians in the territories has led to a double standard in which Israelis are given more legal rights and are punished more lightly than the Palestinians who are subject to military and local law. B'Tselem notes the system violates the principles of equality before the law and territoriality.<ref name="btselem2">{{cite web |url=http://www.btselem.org/english/Settler_Violence/Dual_Legal_System.asp |title=Settler violence: The dual system of law in the Occupied Territories |publisher=]}}</ref> Unlike Palestinians, Israeli civilians living in the Palestinian Territories are not subject to military or local law, but are prosecuted according to Israeli civilian penal law. This originates in the Emergency Regulations bill enacted in 1967 and extended since which gives ] to Israelis in the occupied territories. B'Tselem has said that the difference in legal status of Israelis and Palestinians in the territories has led to a double standard in which Israelis are given more legal rights and are punished more lightly than the Palestinians who are subject to military and local law. B'Tselem notes the system violates the principles of equality before the law and territoriality.<ref name="btselem2">{{cite web |url=http://www.btselem.org/english/Settler_Violence/Dual_Legal_System.asp |title=Settler violence: The dual system of law in the Occupied Territories |publisher=]}}</ref>


Referring to settler violence during the police evacuation of the "Federman Farm" near ], Haaretz has stated in an editorial "Israeli society has become accustomed to giving lawbreaking settlers special treatment", noting that no other group could similarly attack Israeli law enforcement agencies without being severely punished <ref name="haaretz2">{{cite news |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1031614.html |title=Defeat settler terror |publisher=] |date=2008-10-27}}</ref>. ] has characterized settler violence on soldiers and policemen who participated in the evacuation of the "Federman Farm" as "terrorism"<ref name="haaretz2"/>. Referring to settler violence during the police evacuation of the "Federman Farm" near ], Haaretz has stated in an editorial "Israeli society has become accustomed to giving lawbreaking settlers special treatment", noting that no other group could similarly attack Israeli law enforcement agencies without being severely punished.<ref name="haaretz2">{{cite news |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1031614.html |title=Defeat settler terror |publisher=] |date=2008-10-27 |access-date=March 28, 2009 |archive-date=April 27, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100427075708/http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1031614.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> ] has characterized settler violence on soldiers and policemen who participated in the evacuation of the "Federman Farm" as "terrorism".<ref name="haaretz2"/>


In response to the violence directed towards Israeli security forces, Israel declared it would no longer fund any ] from November, 2008.<ref name="abc">{{cite news |title=Israel cuts aid to outposts over settler violence |publisher=] |date=2009-10-03 |url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/11/03/2408502.htm}}</ref> In response to the violence directed towards Israeli security forces, Israel declared it would no longer fund any illegal outposts from November, 2008.<ref name="abc">{{cite news |title=Israel cuts aid to outposts over settler violence |publisher=] |date=2009-10-03 |url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/11/03/2408502.htm}}</ref>


After the evacuation of settlers from ] in December 2008, a riot ensued and a Jewish settler, Ze'ev Braude, was recorded on video shooting two unarmed Palestinians. The victims were shot on their own property, which Braude had entered, and later needed surgery. The ] decided to abandon the prosecution of Braude after the ] ruled that the prosecution must give the defendant access to "sensitive information". The prosecutor's office had earlier said that some of the evidence against Braude was classified for security reasons, due to "the Shin Bet's sources and methods of operation, and identifying details about its units and people." Braude had petitioned the High Court for access.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1102478.html |title=When security trumps justice |date=2009-07-23 |publisher=] |first=Yair |last=Nevo}}</ref> After the evacuation of settlers from ] in December 2008, a riot ensued and a Jewish settler, Ze'ev Braude, was recorded on video shooting two unarmed Palestinians after Palestinians had hurled rocks at him. The victims were shot on their own property, which Braude had entered, and later needed surgery. The ] decided to abandon the prosecution of Braude after the ] ruled that the prosecution must give the defendant access to "sensitive information". The prosecutor's office had earlier said that some of the evidence against Braude was classified for security reasons, due to "the Shin Bet's sources and methods of operation, and identifying details about its units and people". Braude had petitioned the High Court for access.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1102478.html |title=When security trumps justice |date=2009-07-23 |publisher=] |first=Yair |last=Nevo}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/after-controversial-release-settler-who-shot-2-palestinians-to-be-charged-today-1.259265 |title=After controversial release, settler who shot 2 Palestinians to be charged today |date=2008-12-11 |publisher=] |first=Jonathan |last=Lis}}</ref>

The ] reported on rioting and violence in the West Bank in the period preceding the Israeli military operations in Gaza. The report said "Little if any action is taken by the Israeli authorities to investigate, prosecute and punish violence against Palestinians, including killings, by settlers and members of the security forces, resulting in a situation of impunity. The Mission concludes that Israel has failed to fulfil its obligations to protect the Palestinians from violence by private individuals under both international human rights law and international humanitarian law.<ref name="Gaza Conflict 2009">See Report of the United Nations Fact-Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict, A/HRC/12/48, 25 September 2009, para 85</ref>


==Law enforcement action against settlers== ==Law enforcement action against settlers==
The ] reported on rioting and violence in the West Bank in the period preceding the Israeli military operations in Gaza. The report said "Little if any action is taken by the Israeli authorities to investigate, prosecute and punish violence against Palestinians, including killings, by settlers and members of the security forces, resulting in a situation of impunity. The Mission concludes that Israel has failed to fulfil its obligations to protect the Palestinians from violence by private individuals under both international human rights law and international humanitarian law.<ref name="Gaza Conflict 2009"/> The report also stated that the International Court of Justice advisory opinion and “a number of United Nations resolutions have all affirmed that Israel’s practice of constructing settlements in effect, the transfer by an occupying Power of parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies constitutes a breach of the Fourth Geneva Convention”.<ref>See Report of the United Nations Fact-Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict, A/HRC/12/48, 25 September 2009, para 198</ref> The ] reported on rioting and violence in the ] in the period preceding the Israeli military operations in Gaza. The report said "Little if any action is taken by the Israeli authorities to investigate, prosecute and punish violence against Palestinians, including killings, by settlers and members of the security forces, resulting in a situation of impunity. The Mission concludes that Israel has failed to fulfil its obligations to protect the Palestinians from violence by private individuals under both international human rights law and international humanitarian law.<ref name="Gaza Conflict 2009">See Report of the United Nations Fact-Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict, A/HRC/12/48, 25 September 2009, para 85</ref> The report also stated that the International Court of Justice advisory opinion and "a number of United Nations resolutions have all affirmed that Israel’s practice of constructing settlements - in effect, the transfer by an occupying Power of parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies - constitutes a breach of the Fourth Geneva Convention".<ref>See Report of the United Nations Fact-Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict, A/HRC/12/48, 25 September 2009, para 198</ref>


Yesh Din has produced a report, "A Semblance of Law", which found problems with law enforcement actions against Israelis in the ]. According to Yesh Din's study, which was conducted in 2005, more than 90% of complaints against Israelis were closed without indictments, 96% of trespassing cases (including sabotage of trees) against Israelis led to no indictment, 100% of property offenses against Israelis led to no indictment and 5% of complaints against Israelis were lost and never investigated.<ref name="yeshdin1">{{cite web |url=http://www.yesh-din.org/site/index.php?page=summary&lang=en |title=A Semblance of Law - Law Enforcement upon Israeli Civilians in the West Bank |publisher=]}}</ref> According to Amos Harel, attempts by the security forces to bring violent right-wing zealots to justice have suffered from two main problems: investigating Israelis as opposed to Palestinians is subject to more restrictions, and courts have proved to be lenient.<ref>Amos Harel, in ], 26 September 2008.</ref> Human rights nonprofit ] has produced a report, "A Semblance of Law", which found problems with law enforcement actions against Israelis in the West Bank. According to Yesh Din's study, which was conducted in 2005, among complaints against Israelis, more than 90% were closed without indictments mainly due to perpetrators not being found, 5% were lost and never investigated, and 96% of trespassing cases (including sabotage of trees) and 100% of vandalism and other property offense complaints led to no indictment.<ref name="yeshdin1">{{cite web |url=http://www.yesh-din.org/userfiles/file/Reports-English/SemblanceofLawfullreportEng.pdf |title=Law Enforcement upon Israeli Civilians in the West Bank, Semblance of Law |publisher=] |access-date=2012-02-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110317172653/http://www.yesh-din.org/userfiles/file/Reports-English/SemblanceofLawfullreportEng.pdf |archive-date=2011-03-17 |url-status=dead }}</ref>


As well as collecting statistics, Yesh Din examined 42 closed investigation files and found a number of shortcomings, including the use of Hebrew rather than Arabic, a lack of investigating alibis, police rarely went to the scene of the crime. Many closed files had insufficient investigation and in several cases closed files appeared to have sufficient evidence for indictment,<ref name="yeshdin1"/> As well as collecting statistics, Yesh Din examined 42 closed investigation files and found a number of shortcomings, including the use of Hebrew to record testimonies given in Arabic; frequent failure to check the scene where the alleged offense took place; often not taking down eye-witness testimonies; widespread lack of recourse to live identification line-ups with suspected Israeli civilians; hardly any confrontations between complainants and suspects; failure to check alibis; hasty closure of files shortly after the complaint was registered: closing of files even when evidence was sufficient to indict suspects: police refusing to register complaints, and pressure from the Civilian Administration being used to avoid filing complaints.<ref name="yeshdin1"/>


8% of complaints resulted in indictments. The Israeli Justice Ministry responded by stating that legal authorities were closely following specific cases, but said that it was not in its authority to deal with every case.<ref name="haaretz3">{{cite news |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1033864.html |title=Yesh Din report: Only 8% of Palestinian complaints against settlers result in indictment |publisher=] |date=2008-11-03}}</ref> 8% of complaints resulted in indictments. The Israeli Justice Ministry responded by stating that legal authorities were closely following specific cases, but said that it was not in its authority to deal with every case.<ref name="haaretz_yesh_din">{{cite news |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1033864.html |title=''Yesh Din report: Only 8% of Palestinian complaints against settlers result in indictment'' |publisher=Haaretz |date=2008-11-03}}</ref>


Israeli security sources have said that it has become customary for some settlers to take the law into their own hands in the wake of terror attacks in the West Bank.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1076122.html |title=Israel fears Jewish extremists will avenge settlement murder |publisher=] |date=2009-04-04}}</ref> Israeli security sources have said that it has become customary for some settlers to take the law into their own hands in the wake of Palestinian terror attacks in the West Bank.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.haaretz.com/2009-04-03/ty-article/israel-fears-jewish-extremists-will-avenge-settlement-murder/0000017f-e5ef-da9b-a1ff-edef87d00000|title=Israel Fears Jewish Extremists Will Avenge Settlement Murder |work=]|first1=Jonathan|last1=Lis|first2=Anshel|last2=Pfeffer|first3=Nadav|last3=Shragai|date=2009-04-04|access-date=2023-11-21}}</ref>


In the years 2008-2009, the defense establishment has began taking a harder line against unruly settlers.<ref name="Pfeffer"/> In 2008–2009, the defense establishment began taking a harder line against unruly settlers.<ref name="Pfeffer"/>

In 2012, two EU heads of mission reports stated that Israel's security operations in the occupied territories had failed to protect the Palestinian population; it accused Israel of setting up its operations to minimize the impact on settlers of an ongoing campaign of settler violence. The reports noted that, "Over 90% of monitored complaints regarding settler violence filed by Palestinians with the Israeli police in recent years have been closed without indictment", and further added that, "discriminatory protections and privileges for settlers compound these abuses and create an environment in which settlers can act with apparent impunity".<ref name="GnIT"/>

===Administrative detention===
Following an attack by settlers on an IDF army base on 13 December 2011,<ref name=Attack>{{cite news|title=Settlers Riot, Attacking Israeli Base and Post|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/14/world/middleeast/radical-jewish-settlers-clash-with-israeli-troops.html|access-date=December 15, 2011|newspaper=The New York Times|date=December 13, 2011|first=Ethan|last=Bronner}}</ref> the Israeli government authorized administrative detention and military trial for settlers who engaged in violent actions, similar to the treatment accorded Palestinian activists who engage in similar behavior. The IDF was granted the power to arrest violent settlers and plans were announced to increase security on the West Bank and restrict access by known troublemakers. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu characterized the situation as a handful of extremists in a population of generally law-abiding settlers.<ref name=Detention>{{cite news|title=Israel Leader Sets Curbs on Settlers for Violence|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/15/world/middleeast/netanyahu-sets-new-curbs-on-violent-settlers-in-israel.html|access-date=December 15, 2011|newspaper=The New York Times|date=December 14, 2011|first=Ethan|last=Bronner}}</ref> Five West Bank Israelis who are alleged to have planned and participated in the attack on the army base were indicted by the ] on 8 January 2012.<ref name=NYT5>{{cite news|title=Israel Charges 5 Settlers in West Bank Army Base Clash|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/09/world/middleeast/israel-charges-5-settlers-in-clash-at-army-base.html|access-date=January 8, 2011|newspaper=The New York Times|date=January 8, 2011|first=Isabel|last=Kershner}}</ref>


==Settler riots== ==Settler riots==
Israeli withdrawals from ] (in 2005) and an eviction in ] (in 2008) triggered settler rioting in protest. There is also continual conflict between settlers and Palestinians over land, resources and perceived grievances. Israeli ] from ] (in 2005) and an eviction in ] (in 2008) triggered settler rioting in protest. There is also continual conflict between settlers and Palestinians over land, resources and perceived grievances.
In August 2007, soldiers clashed with settlers during a raid in Hebron. Paint and eggs were thrown at the soldiers.<ref name="Hider">{{cite news |url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article2217951.ece |title=Mutinous soldiers are jailed as Israeli army evicts 200 religious settlers after court order |publisher=] |date=2007-08-08 |first=James |last=Hider | location=London}}</ref> In August 2007, soldiers clashed with settlers during a raid in Hebron. Paint and eggs were thrown at the soldiers.<ref name="Hider">{{cite news |url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article2217951.ece |title=Mutinous soldiers are jailed as Israeli army evicts 200 religious settlers after court order |work=The Times |date=2007-08-08 |first=James |last=Hider | location=London}}{{dead link|date=September 2024|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref>


A violent settler protest at the Palestinian village of ] occurred in November 2007, in which hundreds of extremist settlers converged at the entrance of the village and rampaged. The protest occurred five days after a settler was killed by Palestinians. The settlers smashed the windows of houses and cars. According to Funduk villagers, Israeli soldiers and police accompanied the protesters but mostly stood aside while the settlers rampaged.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/08/world/middleeast/08westbank.html?hp |title=Young Israelis Resist Challenges to Settlements |publisher=] |date=2007-12-07 | first=Isabel | last=Kershner | accessdate=2010-05-05}}</ref> A violent settler protest at the Palestinian village of ] occurred in November 2007, in which hundreds of extremist settlers converged at the entrance of the village and rampaged after 29-year-old local settler Ido Zoldan was shot dead in his car by Palestinian gunmen at the entrance to Funduk. The settlers smashed the windows of houses and cars. According to Funduk villagers, Israeli soldiers and police accompanied the protesters but mostly stood aside while the settlers rampaged.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/08/world/middleeast/08westbank.html?hp |title=Young Israelis Resist Challenges to Settlements |work=The New York Times |date=2007-12-07 | first=Isabel | last=Kershner | access-date=2010-05-05}}</ref>


In December 2008 ] settlers angry at the eviction of settlers from a disputed house rioted, shooting three Palestinians and burning Palestinian homes and olive groves. Video footage of the attacks were recorded, leading to widespread condemnation in Israel. The attacks were characterized as "a ]" by then Israeli Prime Minister ] who said he was ashamed "as a Jew"<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7770384.stm |title=Olmert condemns settler 'pogrom' |publisher=] | date=2008-12-07 | accessdate=2010-05-05}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1043795.html |title=Hebron settler riots were out and out pogroms |first=Avi |last=Issacharoff |date=2008-12-07}}</ref>. In December 2008, ] settlers angry at the eviction of settlers from a disputed house rioted, shooting three Palestinian rock-throwers and burning Palestinian homes and olive groves. Video footage of the attacks was recorded, leading to widespread condemnation in Israel. The attacks were characterized as "a ]" by Israeli prime minister ], who said he was ashamed "as a Jew."<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7770384.stm |title=Olmert condemns settler 'pogrom' |publisher=BBC | date=2008-12-07 | access-date=2010-05-05}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.haaretz.com/2008-12-05/ty-article/analysis-hebron-settler-riots-were-out-and-out-pogroms/0000017f-e181-d38f-a57f-e7d392bc0000 |title=Hebron settler riots were out and out pogroms |first=Avi |last=Issacharoff|work=Haaretz |date=2008-12-07|access-date=2023-11-21}}</ref>


Local Palestinians claimed that once the disputed house was evicted, the IDF and the police were "indifferent" to the violence against the Palestinians, and have made no real attempt to stop the settlers from rioting.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.ynet.co.il/english/articles/0,7340,L-3633603,00.html |title=Hebron burning: Settler fire injures Palestinians |first=Ali |last=Waked |date=2008-12-04}}</ref> Local Palestinians stated that once the disputed house was evicted, the IDF and the police were "indifferent" to the violence against the Palestinians and have made no real attempt to stop the settlers from rioting.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.ynet.co.il/english/articles/0,7340,L-3633603,00.html |title=Hebron burning: Settler fire injures Palestinians |first=Ali |last=Waked |date=2008-12-04}}</ref>


Some settlers have publicly adopted what they refer to as a "price tag" policy whereby settlers attack Palestinian villages in retaliation after settler outposts are removed by the Israeli government.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article6721173.ece |title=Israeli settlers burn olive groves in ‘price tag’ retaliation attack |date=2009-05-21 |publisher=] | location=London | first=Sheera | last=Frenkel | accessdate=2010-05-05}}</ref> Some settlers have publicly adopted a "price tag" policy whereby settlers attack Palestinian villages in retaliation after settler outposts are removed by the Israeli government.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article6721173.ece |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110604151208/http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article6721173.ece |url-status=dead |archive-date=June 4, 2011 |title=Israeli settlers burn olive groves in 'price tag' retaliation attack |date=2009-05-21 |work=The Times | location=London | first=Sheera | last=Frenkel | access-date=2010-05-05}}</ref>


In April 2009, dozens of settlers from ] rampaged through the West Bank village of ], smashing car windows, damaging homes and wounding 12 Palestinians.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSL837104020090408 |title=Jewish settlers rampage through West Bank village |date=2009-04-08 |publisher=]}}</ref> In April 2009, dozens of settlers from ] rampaged through the West Bank village of ], smashing car windows, damaging homes and wounding 12 Palestinians. An Israeli army spokeswoman said that the violence started when Palestinians threw stones at Bat Ayin settlers praying on a nearby hill before the Jewish Passover holiday.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/idUSL837104020090408 |title=Jewish settlers rampage through West Bank village |date=2009-04-08 |publisher=Reuters}}</ref>


The United Nations has warned that up to 250,000 Palestinians in 83 villages are "highly or moderately" vulnerable to settler retaliation if the ] in the West Bank are removed by the Israeli government. 75,900 Palestinians in 22 villages are "highly vulnerable". The report also warns that a number of roads around Palestinian villages may become dangerous for the Palestinians to travel on. The settlements ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] and ] are considered as possible threats to nearby Palestinians. The report criticizes "the inadequate level of law enforcement by the Israeli authorities" and "the ambiguous message delivered by the Government of Israel and the IDF top officials to the security forces in the field regarding their authority and responsibility to enforce the law on Israeli settlers".<ref>{{cite new |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1143281.html |title=UN warns 250,000 Palestinians 'vulnerable' to settler violence |publisher=] |date=2010-01-18}}</ref> The United Nations has warned that as many as 250,000 Palestinians in 83 villages are "highly or moderately" vulnerable to settler retaliation if the ] in the West Bank are removed by the Israeli government. A total of 75,900 Palestinians in 22 villages are "highly vulnerable." The report also warns that a number of roads around Palestinian villages may become dangerous for the Palestinians to use. The settlements of ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ] are considered possible threats to nearby Palestinians. The report criticizes "the inadequate level of law enforcement by the Israeli authorities" and "the ambiguous message delivered by the Government of Israel and the IDF top officials to the security forces in the field regarding their authority and responsibility to enforce the law on Israeli settlers."<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1143281.html |title=UN warns 250,000 Palestinians 'vulnerable' to settler violence |publisher=] |date=2010-01-18}}</ref>


==Involvement of youths== ==Involvement of youths==
Some settler who attacked or harassed Palestinians are disaffected youths, referred to in the Israeli media as "hilltop youths". Welfare minister ] has labeled them a "security threat" as well as a "societal and educational danger".<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1042310.html |title=Ministry to launch program to return alienated settler youths to mainstream fold |first=Ruth |last=Sinai|date=2008-12-01}}</ref> Some settlers who attacked or harassed Palestinians are disaffected young adults called the ] by the Israeli media. In 2008, welfare minister ] labeled them a "security threat" as well as a "societal and educational danger."<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1042310.html |title=Ministry to launch program to return alienated settler youths to mainstream fold |first=Ruth |last=Sinai |date=2008-12-01}}</ref> In December 2011, following an outbreak of settler violence against ] property and personnel, Israeli defense minister Ehud Barak said, "There is no doubt that we are talking about terrorists."<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.jpost.com/Defense/Article.aspx?id=249390 |title=Barak: Consider 'hilltop youth' a terror group |first=Marc |last=Sellem |date=2011-12-14}}</ref>


==Attacks on Palestinian agriculture and property== ==Attacks on Palestinian agriculture and property==
]]]
Olive farming is a major industry and employer in the Palestinian West Bank and olive trees are a common target of settler violence. B'Tselem alleges that "olive pickers in areas near certain settlements and outposts in the West Bank have been a target of attacks by settlers, who have cut down and burned olive trees and stolen the crops" and that "security forces have not taken suitable action to prevent the violence." The IDF barred olive picking in extensive areas of land, claiming that the closures were to protect the olive pickers. The case went to the ] in 2006 which found that, as a rule, lands are not to be closed because of settler violence, and that the IDF must enforce the law. According to B'Tselem the IDF has worked around this by saying the lands are closed to protect the settlers.
].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.newtrendmag.org/pictures8.htm|title=NTM Pictures8 {{!}} NewTrendMag.org|website=www.newtrendmag.org|access-date=2019-07-05}}</ref>]]
<ref name="btselem5">{{cite web |url=http://www.btselem.org/english/Settler_Violence/20061029_Olive_Harvest.asp |title= 29 Oct. 06: B'Tselem Urges the Security Forces to Prepare for the Olive Harvest |publisher=] |date=2006-10-29}}</ref>
]" reportedly sprayed by settlers on the Qurtuba girls school in ]<ref> right2edu April 28, 2006</ref><ref>
{{cite book|title=My Israel Question|year=2007|publisher=Melbourne University Press|isbn=978-0522854183|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=G4V8McXG-D4C&pg=PA61|author=Antony Loewenstein|page=61|quote=The Christian Peacemaker Teams released a series of photographs taken in Hebron in recent years that showed the attitudes of many settlers to the Palestinians. Some of the graffiti in English included: 'Die Arab Sand Niggers'; 'Exterminate the Muslims'; 'Watch out Fatima, we will rape all Arab Women'; 'Kill All Arabs' 'White Power: Kill Niggers'; 'Gas the Arabs' and 'Arabs to the Gas Chambers'}}</ref><ref>
{{cite book|title=Streets of Crocodiles: Photography, Media, and Postsocialist Landscapes in Poland|year=2009|publisher=Intellect Ltd., University of Chicago Press|isbn=978-1-84150-365-3|pages=108–109|first=Katarzyna|last=Marciniak|quote=slogans sprayed by Jewish settlers in Hebron}}</ref>]]


=== Agriculture {{anchor|Olive destruction}}===
Amnesty International has said that scores of Palestinian owned sheep as well as gazelles and other animals were poisoned with 2-fluoracetamide near Tuwani on 22 March 2005, depriving Palestinian farmers of their livelihood <ref name="ei1">{{cite press release |url=http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article3792.shtml |title=Israeli authorities must put an immediate end to settler violence |publisher=] |date=2005-04-05}}</ref>.
{{Seealso|Olive cultivation in Palestine}}
Olive farming is a major industry and employer in the Palestinian West Bank and olive trees are a common target of settler violence. According to ] roughly 10,000 Palestinian West Bank olive trees and saplings have suffered either uprooting or damage from Israeli attacks in 2013, a rise from about 8,500 trees damaged in 2012.<ref>], at ] 19 November 2013.</ref> B'Tselem alleges that "olive pickers in areas near certain settlements and outposts in the West Bank have been a target of attacks by settlers, who have cut down and burned olive trees and stolen the crops", and that "security forces have not taken suitable action to prevent the violence". The IDF barred olive picking in extensive areas of land, stating that the closures were to protect the olive pickers. The case went to the ] in 2006 which found that, as a rule, lands are not to be closed because of settler violence, and that the IDF must enforce the law. According to B'Tselem the IDF has worked around this by saying the lands are closed to protect the settlers.<ref name="btselem5">{{cite web |url=http://www.btselem.org/english/Settler_Violence/20061029_Olive_Harvest.asp |title= 29 Oct. 06: B'Tselem Urges the Security Forces to Prepare for the Olive Harvest |publisher=] |date=2006-10-29}}</ref>


Amnesty International has said that scores of Palestinian-owned sheep as well as gazelles and other animals were poisoned with ] near Tuwani on 22 March 2005, depriving Palestinian farmers of their livelihood.<ref>{{cite press release |url=https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/mde15/027/2005/en/ |title=Israeli authorities must put an immediate end to settler violence |publisher=] |date=25 April 2005}}</ref>
In July 2009, a group of Israeli settlers riding horses and carrying torches raided Palestinian areas, burning 1,500-2,000 olive trees and stoning cars.
<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/breaking/2009/0720/breaking50.htm |title=Israelis torch 1,500 olive trees - report |publisher=] |date=2009-07-20}}</ref>


In July 2009, a group of Israeli settlers riding horses and carrying torches raided Palestinian areas, burning 1,500-2,000 olive trees and stoning cars.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/breaking/2009/0720/breaking50.htm |title=Israelis torch 1,500 olive trees - report |publisher=] |date=2009-07-20}}</ref>
===Well contamination===
Palestinian reports of settlers poisoning wells are often dismissed as ], however there have been several documented cases of settlers intentionally contaminating Palestinian water supplies.{{Citation needed|date=April 2010}}


In March 2011, two EU heads-of-mission reports detailed a tripling of violent settler attacks over three years. The report found that the attacks were especially aimed at Palestinian farmers and their livelihood in a systematic campaign of violence and intimidation which included the destruction of over 10,000 olive trees in the preceding year. The report noted that the Israeli state had "so far failed to effectively protect the Palestinian population".<ref name="GnIT"/> According to a confidential IDF document for just the period from 11 Sept. - 20 October 2013, the following Palestinian olive groves, near Israeli settlements near ], ], ], ], and the Ma'on Farm, ], ], ], the ], ], and ], and all under IDF guard, were damaged, but were not reported in the media:
On 13 July 2004, residents of Hirbat Atwana near Hebron found rotting chicken carcases in their well after four Jewish settlers were seen in the village. Israeli police said they suspected militant Jews from a nearby settlement outpost called Havat Maon. Settlers blamed the action on "internal tribal fight between the Palestinians;" Israeli police spokesman Doron Ben-Amo said it was "unlikely" that the Palestinians would contaminate their own well.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/3891531.stm |title=Settlers suspected of well attack] |publisher=], |date=2004-06-13}}</ref><ref>, Maariv, 13 July 2004, retrieved from ] on 18 August 2008.</ref> On 9 December 2007, members of ], an American NGO, reported to have observed a group of Israelis stop next to a cistern in Humra Valley, open the lid, and raise the bucket. The water was later found to be contaminated.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.cpt.org/cptnet/2008/01/19/tuwani-cistern-contaminated-humra-valley |title=Cistern contaminated in Humra Valley |publisher=] |date=2008-01-19}}</ref> ], a British NGO, has reported that settlers deliberately poisoned the only well in ], a village near ], by dumping used diapers into it; and that they shot aid workers who came to clean the well.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.channel4.com/science/microsites/S/science/water_feature/water_wars.html |title=Water Wars |publisher=], |accessdate=2008-08-18}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2006/mar/01/guardiansocietysupplement4 |title=Running on empty |first=Fred |last=Pearce |publisher=] |date=2006-03-01 | location=London}}</ref>
*11 Sept.: 500 trees burned on land belonging to the village of Deir al-Khatab.
*15 Sept.: 17 olive trees chopped down on land belonging to the village of ].
*17 Sept.: 18 olive trees chopped down on land belonging to the village of ].
*20 Sept.: 27 olive trees burned in ].
*21 Sept.: 70 trees chopped down in ].
*2 Oct.: Serious damage to several olive trees on land belonging to the Raba'i family.
*2 Oct.: Serious damage to about 30 olive trees in the village of ].
*3 Oct.: 48 olive trees of the Shatat family chopped down.
*5 Oct.: Serious damage to 130 olive trees of the Fukha family.
*5 Oct.: 15 olive trees chopped down and olives stolen in the village of ].
*7 Oct.: Serious damage to about 60 olive trees and olives stolen in the village of ].
*7 Oct.: Serious damage to eight olive trees on land belonging to the village of ].
*7 Oct.: 35 olive trees in the village of ] chopped down, and about a quarter of the olive crop stolen.
*8 Oct.: About 400 olive trees in the village of ] set on fire.
*13-14 Oct.: Olive trees and grapevines vandalized in the village of ].
*20 Oct.: ] settlers assaulted Palestinians and human rights volunteers as they harvested olives, leaving two farmers and two volunteers - a 71-year-old man and an 18-year-old woman - injured.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.554690|title=Israeli attacks on Palestinian olive groves kept top secret by state|work=]|first=Amira|last=Hass|author-link=Amira Hass|date=28 October 2013|access-date=6 November 2023}}</ref>


According to Yesh Din, 97.4% of complaints submitted to Israeli police by Palestinians who had suffered damage to their olive groves between 2005 and 2013 were closed without indictment.<ref>{{cite web|first1=Gideon|last1=Levy|first2=Daniel|last2=Bar-On|url=http://www.haaretz.com/weekend/twilight-zone/.premium-1.555707|title=It's scorched earth season in the Palestinian olive groves|work=Haaretz|date=2 November 2013|access-date=6 November 2023}}</ref>
In March 2010, ] reported that settlers sabotaged a natural spring used by Palestinians in the village of ] by pouring in a mixture of cement and sand. The settlers were protected by the Israeli Defence Forces as they destroyed the springs.<ref>
], April 2024]]
*{{Cite news |url=http://aljazeera.com/news/articles/34/Settlers-Destroy-Natural-Spring-Near-Salfit.html |publisher=Al Jazeera |title=Settlers Destroy Natural Spring Near Salfit |date=2010-03-08 |accessdate=2010-04-07}}
*{{Cite web|title=Settler Video|url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NZKjdDaZhwc&feature=player_embedded|accessdate=9 April 2010}}</ref>


===Well contamination and water access===
{{Main|Well poisoning}}
On 13 July 2004, residents of Hirbat Atwana near Hebron found rotting chicken carcasses in their well after four Jewish settlers were seen in the village. Israeli police said they suspected militant Jews from a nearby settlement outpost called Havat Maon. Settlers blamed the action on "internal tribal fight between the Palestinians;" Israeli police spokesman Doron Ben-Amo said it was "unlikely" that the Palestinians would contaminate their own well.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/3891531.stm |title=Settlers suspected of well attack |work=BBC News |date=2004-06-13}}</ref><ref>, Maariv, 13 July 2004, retrieved from ] on 18 August 2008.</ref> On 9 December 2007, members of ], an American NGO, reported to have observed a group of Israelis stop next to a cistern in Humra Valley, open the lid, and raise the bucket. The water was later found to be contaminated.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.cpt.org/cptnet/2008/01/19/tuwani-cistern-contaminated-humra-valley |title=Cistern contaminated in Humra Valley |publisher=] |date=2008-01-19 |access-date=December 30, 2009 |archive-date=September 3, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090903004457/http://www.cpt.org/cptnet/2008/01/19/tuwani-cistern-contaminated-humra-valley |url-status=dead }}</ref> ], a British NGO, has reported that settlers deliberately poisoned the only well in ], a village near ], by dumping used diapers into it; and that they shot aid workers who came to clean the well.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.channel4.com/science/microsites/S/science/water_feature/water_wars.html |title=Water Wars |publisher=] |access-date=2008-08-18}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/society/2006/mar/01/guardiansocietysupplement4 |title=Running on empty |first=Fred |last=Pearce |work=The Guardian |date=2006-03-01 | location=London}}</ref>

A United Nations survey released in March 2012 documented the increasing use of threats, violence and intimidation to deny Palestinians access to their water resources in the West Bank. The survey stated that Israeli settlers have been acting systematically to gain control of some 56 springs, most of which are located on private Palestinian land. The report noted that settler actions included "trespass, intimidation and physical assault, stealing of private property, and construction without a building permit". The report criticized the Israeli authorities for having "systematically failed to enforce the law on those responsible for these acts and to provide Palestinians with any effective remedy".<ref name=UNreport>{{cite web|title=Seizure of springs by settlers greatly limits Palestinian access to water - UN report| date=19 March 2012 |url=https://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=41579|publisher=United Nations|access-date=5 June 2012}}</ref><ref name=AFPwell>{{cite news|title=Settlers taking over Palestinian springs: UN report|url=https://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5gz7BqzSN6l9Ij93N85wTZwj3xtHg?docId=CNG.1b8f7ac940bf7703a478ec2514dd94e4.141|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120322041037/http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5gz7BqzSN6l9Ij93N85wTZwj3xtHg?docId=CNG.1b8f7ac940bf7703a478ec2514dd94e4.141|url-status=dead|archive-date=March 22, 2012|access-date=5 June 2012|newspaper=AFP|date=Mar 19, 2012}}</ref><ref name=Telegraph>{{cite news|last=Spencer|first=Richard|title=Israeli settlers using 'acts of intimidation' to take over water supplies on Palestinian land|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/israel/9153690/Israeli-settlers-using-acts-of-intimidation-to-take-over-water-supplies-on-Palestinian-land.html|access-date=5 June 2012|newspaper=The Telegraph|date=19 Mar 2012|location=London}}</ref>

===Civilian casualty===
] reported, from 1 January to 19 September 2023, Israeli settlers and forces killed 189 Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and wounded 8,192. OCHA also said on average, there are three cases of settlers attacking Palestinians in the West Bank of the Jordan River every day, resulting in the killing and injuring of Palestinians, harming their property, and preventing them from reaching their land, workplace, family, and friends.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Hanbali |first1=Layth |title=The eyes of the world are on Gaza – but Palestinians are under attack in the West Bank too |url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/oct/21/gaza-palestinians-west-bank-violence-attacks-israeli-settlers |website=] |date=21 October 2023}}</ref>
===Attacks on mosques=== ===Attacks on mosques===
On December 11, 2009, suspected settler extremists attacked a mosque in the northern West Bank village of ] near ] according to Palestinian officials and Israeli police. The people forced their way into the mosque and burned about 100 holy books including ], ], prayer carpets as well as spray painted anti-Palestinian slogans on the floor, some of which referred to the settlers' "price tag" policy.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article6953281.ece |title=Settlers attack West Bank mosque and burn holy Muslim books |date=2009-12-11 |publisher=] | location=London | first=James | last=Hider | accessdate=2010-05-05}}</ref> In December 2009, suspected settler extremists attacked a mosque in the northern West Bank village of ] near ], according to Palestinian officials and Israeli police. The people forced their way into the mosque and burned about 100 holy books, including ], ], and prayer carpets, and spray-painted anti-Palestinian slogans on the floor, some of which referred to the settlers' "price tag" policy.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article6953281.ece |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100106004317/http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article6953281.ece |url-status=dead |archive-date=January 6, 2010 |title=Settlers attack West Bank mosque and burn holy Muslim books |date=2009-12-11 |work=The Times | location=London | first=James | last=Hider | access-date=2010-05-05}}</ref>

In January 2010, Israeli security officers raided the settlement of ], forcibly entered the settlement's synagogue and ] buildings and arrested ten settlers, including the ], for alleged involvement in the mosque attack.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1143391.html |title=Police arrest 10 in raid on West Bank settlement |publisher=] |date=2010-01-18}}</ref> All were released by the court due to lack of evidence and the court reprimanded the police for arresting the rabbi. As of January 2010, no indictments were served. The state has appealed the ruling.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1145648.html |title=Settler teens suspected in West Bank mosque arson freed from custody |date=2009-02-07 |publisher=Haaretz}}</ref>

In September 2011, the ] in ] became the subject of an ] attack allegedly perpetrated by militant Jewish settlers,<ref>{{Cite news|author=Staff writers|title=EU's Ashton: Settler attack on West Bank mosque undermines Mideast peace|url=http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/eu-s-ashton-settler-attack-on-west-bank-mosque-undermines-mideast-peace-1.382868|date=6 September 2011|newspaper=Haaretz|access-date=6 September 2011}}</ref> who set the mosque on fire by throwing two burning tyres through its windows.<ref name="bbc">{{Cite news|author=Staff writers|title=Fire and graffiti attack on Palestinian mosque in Kasra|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-14786172|date=5 September 2011|newspaper=BBC News|publisher=British Broadcasting Corporation|access-date=6 September 2011}}</ref> Slogans in ] threatening further attacks had been ]ed on the walls, reading "Muhammad is a Pig".<ref>{{Cite news|author=Weiss, Mark|title=West Bank mosque torched in settler attack|url=http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/world/2011/0906/1224303592343.html|date=6 September 2011|newspaper=Irish Times|access-date=6 September 2011}}</ref> A ] had also been graffitied alongside.<ref>{{Cite news|author=Agence France-Presse|title=West Bank mosque torched as police dismantle outpost|url=https://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hTGY028YhNwS8xBwES7Zdww3Nz5Q?docId=CNG.9caaef25216ca20c2d35fc9ef8f44515.7d1|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130124182556/http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hTGY028YhNwS8xBwES7Zdww3Nz5Q?docId=CNG.9caaef25216ca20c2d35fc9ef8f44515.7d1|url-status=dead|archive-date=January 24, 2013|date=6 September 2011|newspaper=Google News|access-date=6 September 2011}}</ref> The attack came hours after Israeli police dismantled three structures in the nearby illegal Jewish settlement of ], leading newspapers to suggest that it may have been carried out by settlers in retaliation.<ref name="bbc"/>

On 12 November, the ] in the ] was damaged extensively when it was torched, reportedly by settlers in what was believed to be a ].<ref name="OCHAN 11.17">
{{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141204104500/http://www.ochaopt.org/documents/ocha_opt_protection_of_civilians_weekly_report_2014_11_22_english.pdf |date=4 December 2014 }}, ] November</ref> Israeli police say the incident does not match previous ‘price tag’ attacks, and that a full investigation was impossible because they were denied entry to the village by Palestinian authorities.<ref>, ], November 12, 2014</ref> According to Haaretz journalist Chaim Levinson, it was the 10th such mosque subject to arson in Israel and the West Bank since June 2011, and no investigation has ever led to an indictment.<ref>Chaim Levinson, Haaretz 13 November 2014</ref> Settler violence has impeded Palestinians from visiting holy sites and worshipping at their mosques, and have interfered with muezzin calls for daily prayer.<ref> US Department of State/Government Printing Office 2005 p. 559.</ref>

===Attacks on churches and monasteries===
The growing ascendency of the right-wing in politics over the past decades has led to increasing attacks on non-Jewish religious properties, associated with "price tag" attacks by settlers and their sympathizers, with a rise in attacks on churches throughout the West Bank and Jerusalem, extending even to Israel. ], ] has decried, "repeated" attacks on Christian and Muslim places of worship in the Palestinian territories by extremist Jewish settlers.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151222111816/https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/news/middle-east/17216-greek-orthodox-church-decries-attacks-by-jewish-settlers |date=December 22, 2015 }} ] 26 February 2015.</ref>
<ref>Ilan Ben Zion, ] 9 May 2014 :’ the latest incident in a wave of both anti-Christian and anti-Arab graffiti and vandalism that has swept the country in recent weeks. . . Mosques, churches, dovish Israeli groups and even Israeli military bases have been targeted by nationalist vandals in recent years.'</ref>
<ref>Una McGahern, Routledge 2012 p. 137 '(Michael Dumper 2002) notes an increasing number of arson attacks and incidents of vandalism against church property conducted by 'Israeli militants and Jewish fundamentalists'. . . Even pro-establishment sources have acknowledged this growing Jewish religious antipathy towards Christians.'</ref><ref>John L. Allen, Jr. Crown Publishing Group 2013: 'Christian churches and other sites have also become targets for "price tag" attacks in Israel, a term for assaults carried out by Israeli settlers and their sympathizers intended to exact a price on groups perceived to oppose settlement activity.'</ref> Christians who have suffered such abuses often charge Israeli authorities with "not doing enough" to safeguard the population and prevent further attacks by Jews.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.jpost.com/Christian-News/Israeli-Church-leaders-blame-anti-Christian-attacks-on-government-inaction-410508|title=Israeli Church leaders blame anti-Christian attacks on government inaction - Christian News - Jerusalem Post|website=www.jpost.com|date=29 July 2015 |access-date=2019-07-05}}</ref> Arab-Israeli member of the Knesset ] observes, "Harassment and harming of places that are holy to Islam and Christianity have become almost constant, and no one is held accountable", and directly blames the Israeli government for "leading the hatred and approving, with a wink, the continuation of the hate crimes against the Arab minority in the state".<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Jerusalem-church-vandalized-with-crude-anti-Christian-slogans-441762|title=Jerusalem church vandalized with crude anti-Christian slogans - Israel News - Jerusalem Post|website=www.jpost.com|date=17 January 2016 |access-date=2019-07-05}}</ref>

===Settler claims of orchestrated vandalism===
A settler group named Tazpit Unit stated to have documented Palestinians destroying trees with the intention of blaming settlers for the destruction. Photos taken by the group allegedly show Palestinians and left-wing activists cutting down Palestinian olive trees using an electric saw. The settlers stated that many of the reported "price tag" operations by settlers were actually carried out by Palestinians with the aim of tarnishing the settlers' image.<ref>{{cite news |author= Yair Altman | url=http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3976976,00.html |title=Settlers: Arabs, leftists staged 'price tag' act Palestinians, leftwing activists documented while sawing trees in bid to accuse settlers |publisher=] |date=2010-10-30}}</ref>

Israeli settlers were accused by an Arab farmer of having gathered his sheep into an area thick with brush and setting fire to the bushes, burning alive his 12 pregnant ewes.<ref name="Hz" >{{cite web|title=Farmer: Settlers burned my sheep alive|url=http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=343201|publisher=Maan News Agency|access-date=2010-12-19|archive-date=January 18, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120118053653/http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=343201|url-status=dead}}</ref> The police questioned the farmer's description of religious settlers wearing ] driving a car on ], as Orthodox Jews do not drive on this day.<ref>{{cite news|last=Issacharoff|first=Avi|title=Police question Palestinian claim settlers burned his herd of sheep|url=http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/police-question-palestinian-claim-settlers-burned-his-herd-of-sheep-1.331714|newspaper=Haaretz|access-date=2010-12-21}}</ref> Caroline Glick writing in the ] reported that the farmer later admitted that he lost control of a brush fire that was responsible for the damage. Israeli media network ] said this incident exposed the tactic of leftists of accepting Arab claims and falsely accusing Jews.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Article.aspx?id=202515|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110110031117/http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Article.aspx?id=202515|url-status=unfit|title=Column One: Agents of influence|archive-date=2011-01-10|publisher=The Jerusalem Post}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/141338#.Tz5hp8WDvko|title=Leftists Caught Red-Handed: 'Burning Sheep' Libel Was Faked|last=Gedalyahu|first=Tzvi Ben|date=26 December 2010 |publisher=www.israelnationalnews.com|access-date=2010-12-26}}</ref>


In March 2012, two Arab males of Beit Zarzir confessed, after being arrested, to damaging a local school for Arab and Jewish students. They admitted responsibility for having sprayed on the wall of the school, "]". The school was sprayed twice in February with the slogans "price tag", "Death to Arabs", and "Holocaust to the Arabs".<ref>{{cite news|last=ראב"ד|first=אחיה|title=חשד: נערים ריססו על קיר בית ספר בצפון "מוות לערבים"|newspaper=Ynet|date=13 March 2012|url=http://www.ynet.co.il/articles/0,7340,L-4202214,00.html|publisher=Ynet News|access-date=2012-03-13}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Arab Youths Confessed to Spraying 'Death to Arabs'|date=13 March 2012 |url=http://www.jewishpress.com/news/breaking-news/arab-youths-confessed-to-spraying-death-to-arabs/2012/03/13/|publisher=Jewish Press|access-date=March 13, 2012}}</ref>
In January 2010, Israeli security officers raided the settlement of ], forcibly entered the settlement's synagogue and ] buildings and arrested ten settlers, including the ], for alleged involvement in the mosque attack.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1143391.html |title=Police arrest 10 in raid on West Bank settlement |publisher=] |date=2010-01-18}}</ref> All were released by the court due to lack of evidence and the court reprimanded the police for arresting the rabbi. As of January 2010 no indictments were served. The state has appealed the ruling.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1145648.html |title=Settler teens suspected in West Bank mosque arson freed from custody |date=2009-02-07 |publisher=Haaretz}}</ref>


==Settler extremism== ==Settler extremism==
{{see also|Zionist political violence|Jewish religious terrorism}}
Most settlers desperately want to be regarded as part of the Israeli mainstream.<ref name="NYT"/> As of September 2010, only a tiny minority among them is violent.<ref name="NYT"> Yossi Klein Halevi, The New York Times, September 2, 2010</ref> The number of settlers involved in violent activities is estimated to have grown from a few dozen individuals into a few hundreds, out of a total population of about 500,000 Jewish settlers.<ref name="bbc1"/>
Extremist groups associated with the settler movement included the ], which existed from 1979 to 1984 as a militant organization linked to the settler activist group ]. They carried out attacks against Jewish students and Palestinian officials, attempted to bomb a bus and planned an attack on the ].<ref>{{cite book|last=Friedman|first=Robert L.|title=Zealots for Zion: Inside Israel's West Bank Settler Movement|year=1992|publisher=Random House|location=New York|isbn=978-0394580531|pages=|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/zealotsforzionin00frie/page/25}}</ref>


The New York Times has noted that the religious, ideological wing of the settler movement is growing more radical. It is widely suspected that a pipe-bomb attack on settler critic ] was perpetrated by settler radicals, who left fliers at the scene offering 1 million shekels to anyone who "kills a member of anti-settlement group ]".<ref name="nytimes1">{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/26/world/middleeast/26settlers.html?_r=2&oref=slogin&ref=middleeast&pagewanted=all |title=Radical Settlers Take On Israel |work=New York Times |date=2008-09-25 |first=Isabel |last=Kershner}}</ref><ref name="jta1">{{cite news |url=http://jta.org/news/article/2008/10/08/110707/jextreme |title=Radical settlers using violence against Jews |date=2008-10-08 |first=Dina |last=Kraft |access-date=2009-03-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120509235507/http://www.jta.org/news/article/2008/10/08/110707/jextreme |archive-date=2012-05-09 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Public Security Minister ] condemned the attack, calling it a "nationalistic terror attack".<ref name="haaretz_attack">{{cite news |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1024412.html |title=Dichter: Prof attack takes us back to days of Rabin assassination |publisher=Haaretz |date=2008-09-26}}</ref>
Extremist groups associated with the settler movement include ] that existed from 1979 to 1984 as a militant organization linked to the settler activist group ]. They carried out attacks against Jewish students and Palestinian officials, attempted to bomb a bus and planned an attack on the ].


Shin Bet security chief ] warned that he has "found a very high willingness among this public to use violence - not just stones, but live weapons - in order to prevent or halt a diplomatic process". He also called settlers' mindset "messianic" and "Satanic".<ref name="upi1">{{cite news |url=http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2008/11/03/Shin_Bet_chief_warns_of_settler_violence/UPI-29461225717279/ |title=Shin Bet chief warns of settler violence |publisher=] |date=2008-11-03}}</ref>
The New York Times has noted that the religious, ideological wing of the settler movement is growing more radical. It is widely suspected that a pipe-bomb attack on settler critic ] was perpetrated by settler radicals, who left fliers at the scene offering 1 million shekels to anyone who kills a member of anti-settlement group ].<ref name="nytimes1">{{cite news |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/26/world/middleeast/26settlers.html?_r=2&oref=slogin&ref=middleeast&pagewanted=all |title=Radical Settlers Take On Israel |publisher=] |date=2008-09-25 |first=Isabel |last=Kershner}}</ref><ref name="jta1">{{cite news |url=http://jta.org/news/article/2008/10/08/110707/jextreme |title=Radical settlers using violence against Jews |date=2008-10-08 |first=Dina |last=Kraft}}</ref> Public Security Minister ] condemned the attack, calling it a "nationalistic terror attack".<ref name="haaretz3">{{cite news |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1024412.html |title=Dichter: Prof attack takes us back to days of Rabin assassination |publisher=] |date=2008-09-26}}</ref>


Shin Bet security chief ] warned that he has "found a very high willingness among this public to use violence -- not just stones, but live weapons -- in order to prevent or halt a diplomatic process." He also called settlers' mindset "messianic" and "Satanic"<ref name="upi1">{{cite news |url=http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2008/11/03/Shin_Bet_chief_warns_of_settler_violence/UPI-29461225717279/ |title=Shin Bet chief warns of settler violence |publisher=] |date=2008-11-03}}</ref>. In 2008, ], a senior Israeli commander in the ], warned that the number of violent settlers had increased from a few dozen to hundreds, and that this rise was impairing the IDF's ability to address other threats.<ref name="bbc1">{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7647991.stm |title='Hundreds join' settler violence |publisher=BBC |date=2008-10-02}}</ref>


In August 2012, the United States defined settler attacks as 'terrorist incidents'.<ref>{{cite news|author=Harriet Sherwood in Jerusalem |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/aug/19/jewish-settler-attack-terrorist-us-palestinian |title=Jewish settler attacks on Palestinians listed as 'terrorist incidents' by US &#124; World news |work=The Guardian |date= 2012-08-19|access-date=2012-09-14 |location=London}}</ref>
IDF Major-General Gadi Shamni has warned that there has been an increase in the number of violent settlers from a few dozen to hundreds and that the increase is impairing the IDF's ability to deal with other threat. A UN report recorded 222 acts of violence by settlers in the first half of 2008 compared with 291 in all of 2007.<ref name="bbc1">{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7647991.stm |title='Hundreds join' settler violence |publisher=] |date=2008-10-02}}</ref>

In July 2014, a day after the burial of ], ], a 16-year-old ], was forced into a car on an ] street by 3 Israelis, two teenagers led by a 30-year-old settler from the West Bank settlement of ].<ref>{{cite web|first=Aron|last=Donzis|url=http://www.timesofisrael.com/name-abu-khdeir-suspect-released/|title=Adult suspect in Abu Khdeir murder named|work=]|date=20 July 2015|access-date=9 November 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|first=Peter|last=Beaumont|author-link=Peter Beaumont (journalist)|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/jun/03/abu-khdeir-murder-trial-jerusalem|title=Abu Khdeir murder trial: defendant tells court he did not plan to kill teenager|work=]|date=3 June 2015|access-date=9 November 2023}}</ref> His family immediately reported the fact to ] who located his charred body a few hours later at ] in the ]. Preliminary results from the autopsy suggested that he was beaten and burnt while still alive.<ref name="20140706NYT">{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/07/world/middleeast/israel-palestinians-muhammad-abu-khdeir.html?_r=0 |title=Suspects Arrested in Death of Palestinian Youth, Israeli Police Say |last=Kershner |first=Isabel |work=] |date=6 July 2014 |access-date=6 July 2014}}</ref><ref name="Autopsy" >{{cite news |url=http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=710089 |title=Official: Autopsy shows Palestinian youth burnt alive |publisher=] |date=5 July 2014 |access-date=6 July 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140708195202/http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=710089 |archive-date=8 July 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name="Maan: Palestinian teen abducted">{{cite news |url=http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=709299 |title=Palestinian teen abducted, killed in suspected revenge attack |publisher=] |date=2 July 2014 |access-date=6 July 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140707041441/http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=709299 |archive-date=7 July 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |url = http://www.timesofisrael.com/palestinian-teen-said-found-dead-in-jerusalem-forest/ |title = Arab teen killed in capital; revenge attack suspected |last1 = Ben Zion|first1 = Ilan|date = 2 July 2014 |publisher = The Times of Israel |access-date = 2014-07-04 |url-status=live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20140706154507/http://www.timesofisrael.com/palestinian-teen-said-found-dead-in-jerusalem-forest/ |archive-date = 2014-07-06 |last2 = Berman |first2 = Lazar}}</ref> The murder suspects explained the attack as a response to the ].<ref name="Sharon">Assaf Sharon, , '']'', 25 September 2014, pp. 20-24.</ref><ref name=":3">{{Cite news|url = http://www.kcra.com/news/family-of-slain-palestinian-teen-lives-in-sacramento/26792470#!8p7a7|title = Family of slain Palestinian teen lives in Sacramento|last = Hoff|first = Mallory|date = 3 July 2014|work = KCRA Television Sacramento|access-date = 4 July 2014}}</ref> The murders contributed to a breakout of hostilities in the ].<ref name="NT Times">{{cite web | url=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/09/world/middleeast/israel-steps-up-offensive-against-hamas-in-gaza.html | title=Israel and Hamas Trade Attacks as Tension Rises | work=The New York Times | date=8 July 2014 | access-date=13 November 2014 |author1=Eranger, Steven |author2=Kershner, Isabel }}</ref> While it has become a standard operating procedure in Israel to bulldoze the homes of suspected terrorists and their families,<ref>Herb Keinon, Yonah Jeremy Bob, , ] 23 June 2014</ref><ref>{{cite web|first=Daniel|last=Landes|url=http://forward.com/opinion/israel/201485/bulldoze-homes-of-jewish-terrorists-too/|title=Bulldoze Homes of Jewish Terrorists, Too|work=]|date=5 July 2014|access-date=13 November 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|first=Asher|last=Schechter|url=http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.627383|title=Immoral, Ineffective: Destroying Terrorists' Homes Is Nothing but Empty Revenge|work=]|date=20 November 2014|access-date=13 November 2023}}</ref> and while Khdeir's mother requested their houses be demolished,<ref>Chaim Levinson, The Associated Press,
, ] 6 July 2014: "They need to treat them the way they treat us. They need to demolish their homes and round them up, the way they do it to our children", she added.</ref><ref>{{cite web|first=Daniel|last=Estrin|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/mohammed-abu-khdeir-murder-mother-speaks-out-after-israeli-men-arrested-for-nationalistic-killing-9588080.html|title=Mohammed Abu Khdeir murder: Mother speaks out after Israeli men arrested for 'nationalistic' killing|work=]|date=7 July 2014|access-date=7 November 2023}}</ref> none of the perpetrators' homes were targeted for demolition. While Palestinians are tried in military courts, West Bank settlers are tried in Israel in civil courts, and no Jewish terrorist homes have been demolished.<ref>{{cite book|first=Amos|last=Guiora|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OJo1SvK2qWUC&pg=PA99|title=Freedom from Religion: Rights and National Security|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2013|page=99|isbn=978-0-19-997590-7 }}</ref> Demolition, the state has argued, does not apply to Jewish suspects of terrorism, because "there is no need to deter potential Jewish terrorists".<ref>{{cite web|first=Revital|last=Hovet|url=http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.629930|title=Israel defends Only Razing Homes of Arab Terrorist, Not Jewish Ones|work=]|date=4 December 2014|access-date=7 November 2023}}</ref>
The ] criticized Israel for "failing to protect the Palestinian population".<ref name="haaretz.com">{{Cite news|url=https://www.haaretz.com/.premium-eu-state-dept-condemn-deadly-west-bank-arson-attack-1.5381664|title=EU, U.S. State Department Condemn 'Vicious' West Bank Arson Attack|last1=Ravid|first1=Barak|date=2015-07-31|work=Haaretz|access-date=2019-07-05|last2=Khoury|first2=Jack|language=en}}</ref>

In July 2015, a similar incident happened where Israeli settlers committed ], killing 3 people, including 18-month-old Ali Saad Dawabsheh who was burned alive, and both of his parents who died from their injuries later on.<ref>Jack Khoury, Chaim Levinson and Gili Cohen, ] 31 July 2015.</ref>

==Threats of rape and sexual violence==
On 24 August 2017, settlers from ] employed a loudspeaker system to verbally harass Palestinian residents of the al-Hariqah neighborhood in Hebron. A Palestinian volunteer for Israeli human rights organization B'Tselem recorded segments of the incident from her window, which led the settlers to target their abuse at her. They threatened violence and used racist and misogynistic language, including explicit threats such as, "The biggest dick will screw you. Come, come, come, come. We're waiting for you, you whore All the Jews are waiting for you here." Despite the severity of the threats and harassment, Israeli security forces present at the scene did not intervene, allowing the settlers to continue their actions undisturbed.<ref>{{cite press release|url=https://www.btselem.org/press_releases/20170829_harassment_at_night_in_hebron|title="You can take your camera and stick it straight up your big ass"|date=29 August 2017|agency=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240614115713/https://www.btselem.org/press_releases/20170829_harassment_at_night_in_hebron|archive-date=14 June 2024|url-status=live|access-date=30 August 2024}}</ref>

On 13 May 2021, around 10 settlers gathered near the fence erected by the Israeli military around a Palestinian neighborhood in Hebron, throwing stones at passersby and nearby homes while several soldiers observed without intervening. After approximately an hour and a half, the soldiers left without making any arrests or addressing the settlers' actions. The settlers continued to throw stones on the street that night and in the following days, while both settlers and soldiers subjected Palestinians documenting the events to verbal harassment with homophobic, transphobic and sexist slurs.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.btselem.org/video/20210711_sexism_homophobia_and_harassment_by_settlers_and_soldiers_hebron_routine_in_hebron#full|title=Sexism, homophobia and harassment by settlers and soldiers: life's routine in Hebron|date=11 July 2021|work=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220308091550/https://www.btselem.org/video/20210711_sexism_homophobia_and_harassment_by_settlers_and_soldiers_hebron_routine_in_hebron#full|archive-date=8 March 2022|url-status=live|access-date=30 August 2024}}</ref>

On 12 October 2023, settlers dressed in army uniforms detained three Palestinians from the West Bank village of Wadi as-Seeq: Mohammad Khaled, 27, Abu Hassan, 46, both employees of the Palestinian Authority, and a local resident aged 30. All of them reported severe mistreatment during their detention. Khaled described the abuse, stating, "They had an iron pipe and knives, which they also used to hit us. They beat us everywhere, hands, chest, and head too. Everywhere. They stubbed out cigarettes on us. They tried to pull out my fingernails." Hassan compared the abuse to the ], saying, "You heard about the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq? It's exactly like what happened there. Abu Ghraib with the army." He also recounted, "They poured water on us, urinated on us, and then someone holding a stick tried to shove it up my rear. I fought with all my strength until he simply gave up." A photograph taken during their detention was posted on the Facebook page of Metzuda – the Security World of Israel, showing the detainees and captioned, "A terrorist penetration incident at the Ben Pazi farm near ]. Our forces captured the terrorists." The image was later removed.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/2023-10-21/ty-article-magazine/.premium/beatings-burns-attempted-sexual-assault-settlers-and-soldiers-abused-palestinians/0000018b-530f-d1d7-ab8b-7f5fca1d0000|title=Cigarette Burns, Beatings, Attempted Sexual Assault: Settlers and Soldiers Abused Palestinians|last=Shezaf|first=Hagar|date=21 October 2023|work=]|archive-url=https://archive.today/20240310113538/https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/2023-10-21/ty-article-magazine/.premium/beatings-burns-attempted-sexual-assault-settlers-and-soldiers-abused-palestinians/0000018b-530f-d1d7-ab8b-7f5fca1d0000|archive-date=10 March 2024|url-status=live|access-date=30 August 2024}}</ref>

On 17 April 2024, Human Rights Watch reported that the Israeli military either participated in or failed to protect Palestinians from violent settler attacks in the West Bank, resulting in the displacement of people from 20 communities and the complete uprooting of at least seven communities since October 2023. Settlers were involved in assaults, torture, sexual violence, theft of property and livestock, threats of permanent expulsion, and the destruction of homes and schools. Bill Van Esveld, associate children's rights director at Human Rights Watch, stated, "Settlers and soldiers have displaced entire Palestinian communities, destroying every home, with the apparent backing of higher Israeli authorities." He also noted, "While the attention of the world is focused on Gaza, abuses in the West Bank, fueled by decades of impunity and complacency among Israel's allies, are soaring."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.hrw.org/news/2024/04/17/west-bank-israel-responsible-rising-settler-violence|title=West Bank: Israel Responsible for Rising Settler Violence|date=17 April 2024|work=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240828021700/https://www.hrw.org/news/2024/04/17/west-bank-israel-responsible-rising-settler-violence|archive-date=28 August 2024|url-status=live|access-date=30 August 2024}}</ref>

On 25 July 2024, Australia joined Europe and the United States in imposing sanctions on Israeli settlers accused of beatings, sexual assault and torture of Palestinians in the occupied West Bank. Australia's Foreign Minister ] declared financial sanctions and travel restrictions on seven individuals along with the ] settler group. "The individuals sanctioned today have been involved in violent attacks on Palestinians," Wong said. "This includes beatings, sexual assault and torture of Palestinians resulting in serious injury and in some cases, death." The decision aligned with measures taken by the US, Britain, Canada, and the European Union, all of which had also imposed sanctions on Israeli settlers.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/australia-sanctions-israel-settlers-accused-of-sexual-assault-of-palestinians-6183746|title=Australia Sanctions Israel Settlers Accused Of Sexual Assault Of Palestinians|date=25 July 2024|work=NDTV|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240827135239/https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/australia-sanctions-israel-settlers-accused-of-sexual-assault-of-palestinians-6183746|archive-date=27 August 2024|url-status=live|access-date=30 August 2024}}</ref>

On 4 August 2024, a masked settler on horseback arrived at Khirbet Wadi a-Rakhim in the ], herding approximately 20 cows into a barley field owned by the Harini family. Shortly thereafter, three additional settlers, including the identified Shem Tov Luski, arrived by car. The settlers, some carrying clubs, approached the Harini family's home, claiming ownership of the land, house, and well, and engaging in verbal abuse. Luski also sexually harassed a family member, making references to the military detention facility ] and threatening sexual violence with comments such as, "You look so fresh. So sweet. I'll be happy to sit with you in jail someday. I would be happy. You know Sde Teiman? Ooh-ooh. Rape in the name of God." Despite calls to the police from residents and international activists, no officers were dispatched, and the residents were advised to file a complaint at the ] police station.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.btselem.org/video/20242025_settlers_graze_cattle_on_private_palestinian_land_and_harass_and_threaten_family_in_wadi_a_rakhim_south_hebron_hills#full|title=Kh. Wadi a-Rakhim, South Hebron Hills: Settler Shem Tov Luski sexually harasses Palestinian and implicitly threatens rape|date=25 August 2024|work=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240827203638/https://www.btselem.org/video/20242025_settlers_graze_cattle_on_private_palestinian_land_and_harass_and_threaten_family_in_wadi_a_rakhim_south_hebron_hills#full|archive-date=27 August 2024|url-status=live|access-date=30 August 2024}}</ref>


==International reactions== ==International reactions==

The ] has condemned "acts of violence and brutality committed against Palestinian civilians by Israeli settlers in the West Bank" calling on the Israeli government to put an end to it.<ref name="ynet1">{{cite news |url=http://www.ynet.co.il/english/articles/0,7340,L-3615844,00.html |title=EU condemns settler violence |publisher=] |date=2008-10-31}}</ref>
In December 2011, following a briefing to the ], all of the regional and political groupings seated at the council issued statements expressing dismay at violence by settlers and right-wing activists, naming the issue as an obstacle to the resumption of peace talks.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2011/12/20111221222731546.html | title=Israel condemned at UN over settlements | publisher=Al Jazeera | date=22 Dec 2011 | access-date=12 February 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-16279947 | title=UN groupings criticise Israeli settlement activities | publisher=BBC | date=2011-12-20 | access-date=20 December 2012}}</ref>
The ] (HSRC) a statutory research agency released an exhaustive study indicating that Israel practices both colonialism and apartheid in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. The study was conducted by an international team of scholars and practitioners of international public law from South Africa, the United Kingdom, Israel and the West Bank. The study reviewed Israel's practices in the territories according to definitions of colonialism and apartheid provided by international law. The project was suggested by the January 2007 report by South African jurist John Dugard, in his capacity as Special Rapporteur to the United Nations Human Rights Council. He said that the practices of Israel had assumed characteristics of colonialism and apartheid and that an advisory opinion on the legal consequences should be sought from the International Court of Justice.<ref>see ] and colonialism in the Occupied Palestinian Territories]</ref>

In one of a number of statements on the issue, the EU expressed "deep concern regarding settler extremism and incitement by settlers in the West Bank". The statement further added that "the EU condemns continuous settler violence and deliberate provocations against Palestinian civilians. It calls on the government of Israel to bring the perpetrators to justice and to comply with its obligations under international law."<ref name="HzEU">{{cite news |url=http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/eu-israel-s-policies-in-the-west-bank-endanger-two-state-solution-1.430421 |title=EU: Israel's policies in the West Bank endanger two-state solution |work=]|first=Barak|last=Ravid |date=May 14, 2012|access-date=8 November 2023}}</ref><ref name="ynet1">{{cite news |url=https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3615844,00.html |title=EU condemns settler violence |work=] |date=2008-10-31|access-date=2023-11-08}}</ref>

== International sanctions==
{{main|List of sanctions involving Israel}}
Israeli settler violence received greater attention by the US government following the outbreak of the ] in October 2023.<ref name="Secretary Antony">{{Cite web|url=https://www.state.gov/secretary-antony-j-blinken-at-a-press-availability-43/|title=Secretary Antony J. Blinken at a Press Availability}}</ref>
While Rights groups have demanded US Secretary of State Blinken to punish Israeli settlement groups for their actions against Palestinians in the West Bank, many have also stressed that the sanctions do not go far enough because the Israeli government supports the settlements itself.<ref>{{cite news |title=Biden issues more Israeli settler sanctions ahead of Trump term |url=https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/11/18/biden-issues-more-israeli-settler-sanctions-ahead-of-trump-term |agency=Al Jazeera |date=18 Nov 2024}}</ref>
On 5 December 2023, Blinken introduced new visa restrictions regarding entry to the US of persons who committed acts of violence in the West Bank.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.state.gov/announcement-of-visa-restriction-policy-to-promote-peace-security-and-stability-in-the-west-bank/|title=Announcement of Visa Restriction Policy to Promote Peace, Security, and Stability in the West Bank|website=state.gov|date=5 December 2023|access-date=6 March 2024}}</ref> On 1 February 2024, US President Biden issued an ] due to high levels of settler violence, forced displacement of Palestinians, and property destruction in the West Bank. The order imposes sanctions on foreign persons determined to be responsible for or complicit in actions that threaten the peace, security, or stability of the West Bank. It blocks their property interests in the US, suspends their entry into the country and prohibits transactions with sanctioned persons. The stated objective is to address events regarded by the administration as "an unusual and extraordinary threat" undermining US foreign policy objectives and threatening security in the region.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2024/02/01/executive-order-on-imposing-certain-sanctions-on-persons-undermining-peace-security-and-stability-in-the-west-bank/|title=Executive Order on Imposing Certain Sanctions on Persons Undermining Peace, Security, and Stability in the West Bank|website=whitehouse.gov|date=1 February 2024|access-date=6 March 2024}}</ref>
]

Sanctions were announced in February 2024 by the United Kingdom against extremist Israeli settlers who have violently attacked Palestinians in the West Bank. The sanctions include financial and travel restrictions with four settlers being sanctioned initially after documentation showed they engaged in systematic intimidation and violence against Palestinians; at times at gunpoint, to make them leave their homes.<ref>{{Cite web |date=12 February 2024 |title=UK sanctions extremist settlers in the West Bank |url=https://www.gov.uk/government/news/uk-sanctions-extremist-settlers-in-the-west-bank |access-date=2024-02-12 |website=GOV.UK |language=en}}</ref>
Further sanctions against violent settlers were announced by the European Union on 19 April 2024 as the European Council blacklisted the right-wing organizations ] and ] and the individuals ], Elisha Yered, Neria Ben Pazi and Yinon Levi.<ref></ref>
Because of violence against Palestinians in the West Bank and Jerusalem on February 28, France imposed sanctions against extremist Israeli settlers, including a ban on entering French territory. Also, Emanuel Macron's office said they are considering extending sanctions on Israeli settlers.<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.lemonde.fr/en/international/article/2024/02/13/france-sanctions-28-extremist-israeli-settlers_6521516_4.html | title=France sanctions 28 'extremist' Israeli settlers | work=Le Monde | date=13 February 2024 | agency=AFP | accessdate=19 June 2024 | location=Paris}}</ref>


==Statistics== ==Statistics==
According to B'Tselem 49 Palestinians were killed by Israeli civilians between 2000 and 2010 <ref name="btselem6">{{cite web |url=http://www.btselem.org/english/Statistics/Casualties.asp |title=Statistics |publisher=]}}</ref>, of which the majority is settler-related<ref name="btselem7">{{cite web |url=http://www.btselem.org/english/Statistics/Casualties_Data.asp?Category=3&region=TER |title= Palestinians killed by Israeli civilians in the Occupied Territories, 29.9.2000 - 31.7.2010 |publisher=]}}</ref>. According to B'Tselem a significant portion of the above were killed while attempting to infiltrate settlements or attacking Israelis.<ref name="btselem7"/> B'Tselem also keeps a record of incidences of settler violence of which there have been 2 so far in 2009 <ref name="btselem8">{{cite web |url=http://www.btselem.org/english/OTA/?WebbTopicNumber=01&image.x=14&image.y=7 |title= Settler Violence |publisher=]}}</ref>.


The ] shows that more Palestinians were injured either by settlers or members of the Israeli security forces in attacks in the first six months of 2021 than in the whole of 2020 and about equal to the total for 2019. ] has logged a 33 per cent increase in attacks during the first six months of 2021 compared with the same period last year and said this was "enacted with an increasingly open cooperation by Israel’s security forces and with the full backing of Israeli authorities".
The ] observed 207 incidents involving settler violence against Palestinians in the period between September 2008 and March 2009. The number of settler attacks peaked on the 4th of December when the evacuation of the ] in ] took place.<ref name="UnitedNationsMay2009">{{cite web |url=http://www.ochaopt.org/documents/ocha_opt_movement_and_access_2009_05_25_english.pdf |date=2009-05-25 |accessdate=2010-03-31 |publisher=] |title=West Bank Movement and Access Update May 2009}}</ref>
<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/israel-s-security-forces-are-complicit-in-settler-violence-against-palestinians-report-finds-b1888125.html|title=Israel's security forces are 'complicit' in drastic surge in settler violence, report finds|date=July 23, 2021|website=The Independent|first=Bel|last=Trew|access-date=8 November 2023}}</ref> On 19 October 2021, ] told the United Nations Security Council "We are deeply concerned by the violence perpetrated by Israeli settlers in the West Bank against Palestinians and their property," and that "Reports of masked men terrorizing a village in Hebron, destroying homes and injuring children on September 28, and similar acts elsewhere in the West Bank, are abhorrent." She said that the US "appreciated the strong and unequivocal condemnation of this violence by Foreign Minister Lapid, Defense Minister Gantz, and others in the Israeli government," while urging Israel "to investigate these incidents fully, including the response by Israeli security forces."<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-u-s-ambassador-to-the-united-nations-calls-israeli-settler-violence-abhorrent-1.10310602|title=U.S. Envoy to the United Nations Calls Israeli Settler Violence 'Abhorrent'|newspaper=Haaretz|first=Jonathan|last=Lis|date=20 October 2021|access-date=8 November 2023}}</ref>

On 14 November 2021, a report by B'Tselem detailed the takeover of nearly {{convert|11|sqmi|km2}} of farm and pasture land by settlers over the past five years and that recent months have seen a steep increase in violence committed by Jewish settlers. The NGO said that Israel has been using settler violence as a "major informal tool" to drive Palestinians from farming and pasture lands in the occupied West Bank. ''Haaretz'' asked the Israel Defense Forces, the police and the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories for a response to the report's conclusion that violence from the outposts and isolated farms serves the state. The IDF Spokesperson's Office said: "The IDF invests a lot of effort in attempts to eradicate the violent incidents in the area, and is in direct contact with the various civilian and security entities in these areas. The IDF will continue to operate in the region, in order to enable law and security in the area." The police and COGAT declined to comment.<ref>https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/rights-group-israeli-settler-violence-tool-to-seize-land/2021/11/14/8d90fc1c-4540-11ec-beca-3cc7103bd814_story.html {{Dead link|date=June 2022}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium.HIGHLIGHT-in-5-years-4-new-settler-farms-took-palestinian-land-the-size-of-a-town-1.10382008|title=In Five Years, Four New Settler Farms Took Palestinian Land the Size of a Big Town|newspaper=Haaretz|first=Amira|last=Hass|date=14 November 2021|access-date=13 November 2023}}</ref>

Settler violence increased following the election of the ] in December 2022, which was notable for its inclusion of far-right politicians and support for expanding Israeli settlements in the Palestinian territories.<ref>{{Cite news |last1=McKernan |first1=Bethan |last2=Kierszenbaum |first2=Quique |date=2023-07-02 |title=Israel's far-right government fans the flames of vigilante settler violence |work=] |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/jul/02/israel-vigilante-settlers-violence-benjamin-netanyahu |access-date=2023-11-02 |issn=0029-7712}}</ref><ref name="Gettleman">{{Cite news |last1=Gettleman |first1=Jeffrey |last2=Nazzal |first2=Rami |last3=Sella |first3=Adam |date=2023-11-02 |title=How a Campaign of Extremist Violence Is Pushing the West Bank to the Brink |language=en-US |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/02/world/middleeast/west-bank-palestinians-israel-settlers.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231102130106/https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/02/world/middleeast/west-bank-palestinians-israel-settlers.html |archive-date=2023-11-02 |url-status=live |access-date=2023-11-02 |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> Settler violence increased further following ] on 7 October 2023. B'Tselem told ] that in first six days since the attack, there was an "organised effort by settlers to use the fact that the entire international and local attention is focused on Gaza and the north of Israel to try to seize land in the West Bank" and had recorded at least 46 incidents in which settlers threatened, physically attacked or damaged the property of Palestinians.<ref>{{Cite news |date=2023-10-21 |title=Palestinians under attack as Israeli settler violence surges in the West Bank |work=BBC News|first=Joel|last=Gunter|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-67173344 |access-date=2023-10-22}}</ref> United Nations officials say that since the attacks, the Israel Defense Forces and armed settlers killed more than 120 Palestinians in the West Bank, with most deaths occurring in clashes with Israeli soldiers.<ref name="Gettleman" />


==See also== ==See also==
{{Portal|Israel}}
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==Notes== ==Notes==
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{{Judea and Samaria}}
==External links==
* (October 2015). Yesh Din monitoring update 2005-2015 data sheet
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120509145842/http://www.ochaopt.org/documents/ocha_opt_settler_violence_map_april_2012_english.pdf |date=May 9, 2012 }} (2011)
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Latest revision as of 11:14, 26 December 2024

Attacks targeting Palestinians in the West Bank

Swedish volunteer Tove Johannson (pictured) suffered a broken cheekbone from a hit in the face with a bottle by an Israeli settler in Hebron on November 18, 2006. She and other European members of the International Solidarity Movement sought to escort Palestinian children home from school.

Palestinians are the target of violence by Israeli settlers and their supporters, predominantly in the West Bank. In November 2021, Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz discussed the steep rise in the number of incidents between settlers and Palestinians in the West Bank, many of which result from attacks by residents of illegal settler outposts on Palestinians from neighboring villages. Settler violence also includes acts known as price tag attacks that are in response to actions by the Israeli government, usually against Palestinian targets and occasionally against Israeli security forces in the West Bank.

Settlers attack an elementary school in Mu'arrajat, Jericho District, September 2024

Palestinian police are forbidden from reacting to acts of violence by Israeli settlers, a fact which diminishes their credibility among Palestinians. Between January and November 2008, 515 criminal suits were opened by Israel against settlers for violence against Arabs or Israeli security forces; 502 of these involved "right wing radicals" while 13 involved "left wing anarchists". In 2008, the senior Israeli commander in the West Bank said that a hard core of a few hundred activists were involved in violence against the Palestinians and Israeli soldiers. Some prominent Jewish religious figures living in the occupied territories, as well as Israeli government officials, have condemned and expressed outrage over such behavior, while religious justifications for settler killings have also been given. Israeli media said the defense establishment began taking a harder line against unruly settlers starting in 2008. In 2011 the BBC reported that "vast majority of settlers are non-violent but some within the Israeli government acknowledge a growing problem with extremists." UN figures from 2011 showed that 90% of complaints filed against settlers by Palestinians with the Israeli police never led to indictment.

In the 21st century, there has been a steady increase in violence and terror perpetrated by Israeli settlers against Palestinians. In 2012, an EU heads of mission report found that settler violence had more than tripled in the three years up to 2011. United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) figures state that the annual rate of settler attacks (2,100 attacks in 8 years) has almost quadrupled between 2006 and 2014. In 2021, there was yet another wave of settler violence which erupted after a 16-year-old settler died in a car chase with Israeli police after having hurled rocks at Palestinians. So far it has resulted in 44 incidents in the span of a few weeks, injuring two Palestinian children. In the latter parts of 2021, there has been a marked increase in settler violence toward Palestinians, condemned at the United Nations Security Council.

This violence increased further following the election of a far-right government in 2022 which proposed to expand Israeli settlements in Palestinian territories, as well as the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel on 7 October 2023. In October 2024 Al Jazeera reported that there were 1,423 recorded incidents of settler violence in the west bank since 7 October, with 321 incidents, Ramallah and al-Bireh Governorate, 319 incidents in Nablus Governorate and 298 in Hebron Governorate.

History

Physical violence by settlers against Palestinians in the West Bank started in a systematic manner in 1980, as some religious settlers created a secret organization later referred to as "the Jewish Underground". This group was captured by Israeli law enforcement authorities in 1984. Settler violence received a new boost following the Oslo agreement in 1993. In late 2022, far-right leaders of the Israeli settlement movement were elected into the government of Israel and appointed as prominent ministers; in early 2023, Israeli settler violence increased, which included the Huwara rampage of February 2023. In October 2023, the outbreak of the Israel–Hamas war was accompanied by a further escalation in Israeli settler violence in the West Bank. After the war began, the settlers "have acted with near-impunity", wrote BBC News in May 2024.

In April 2024, Israeli settlers rampaged through Palestinian villages in the West Bank after the disappearance of Israeli teenager Benjamin Achimeir on 12 April 2024, whose dead body was found a day later. In total, 11 Palestinian villages were attacked, four Palestinians were shot dead and thousands of animals were killed, while a dozen homes and over 100 cars were burned. BBC News, citing messages from Israeli settlers' WhatsApp groups and testimony from Palestinian villagers and officials, described the rampage as appearing to be a "organised campaign of revenge … carried out by co-ordinated groups on the ground, and targeted against ordinary Palestinians with no apparent connection to the murder of Benjamin Achimeir other than the bad luck of living nearby."

Israel's settlement policy

Settlements (darker pink) and areas of the West Bank (lighter pink) where access by Palestinians was closed or restricted at the time. Source: United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, January 2006.

Israel has justified its civilian settlements by stating the territories in question are not occupied, but disputed, and that a temporary use of land and buildings for various purposes appears permissible under a plea of military necessity and that the settlements fulfilled security needs. The United Nations affirmed the principle of international law that the continuation of colonialism in all its forms and manifestations is a crime and that colonial peoples have the inherent right to struggle by all necessary means at their disposal against colonial powers and alien domination in exercise of their right of self-determination. National liberation struggles are categorized as international armed conflicts by Article 1(4) of the Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949 to which the majority of states (including the Western states) are parties. The International Court of Justice concluded that Israel had breached its obligations under international law by establishing settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and that Israel cannot rely on a right of self-defence or on a state of necessity in order to preclude the wrongfulness of imposing a régime, which is contrary to international law. The Court also concluded that the Israeli régime violates the basic human rights of the Palestinians by impeding the liberty of movement of the inhabitants of the Occupied Palestinian Territory (with the exception of Israeli citizens) and their exercise of the right to work, to health, to education and to an adequate standard of living.

In Hebron, where 500-600 settlers live among 167,000 Palestinians, B'Tselem argues that there have been "grave violations" of Palestinian human rights because of the "presence of the settlers within the city". The organization cites regular incidents of "almost daily physical violence and property damage by settlers in the city", curfews and restrictions of movement that are "among the harshest in the Occupied Territories", and violence by Israeli border policemen and the IDF against Palestinians who live in the city's H2 sector.

Human Rights Watch reports on physical violence against Palestinians by settlers, including, "frequent stoning and shooting at Palestinian cars. In many cases, settlers abuse Palestinians in front of Israeli soldiers or police with little interference from the authorities."

B'Tselem also says that settler actions include "blocking roadways, so as to impede Palestinian life and commerce. The settlers also shoot solar panels on roofs of buildings, torch automobiles, shatter windowpanes and windshields, destroy crops, uproot trees, abuse merchants and owners of stalls in the market. Some of these actions are intended to force Palestinians to leave their homes and farmland, and thereby enable the settlers to gain control of them."

Causes of violence

When an 11-year-old Palestinian girl from Nablus was killed by settlers in 1983, in their defense, the chief rabbi of the Sephardic community reportedly cited a Talmudic text justifying killing an enemy on occasions when one may see from a child's perspective that he or she will grow up to become your enemy. Rabbis have been asked by settler militants to provide rulings to justify acts that are aimed to block peace with, or the return of land to, Palestinians. The theft of Palestinian olive harvests has been justified by some rabbis. Former chief rabbi Mordechai Eliyahu stated that: "Since the land is the inheritance of the People of Israel, planting on this land by gentiles is planting on land that does not belong to them. If someone puts a tree on my land, both the tree and the fruit it yields belongs to me." Some rabbinical extremists cite the biblical edict to exterminate the Amalekites to justify both expelling Palestinians from the land and killing Arab civilians in wartime.

One of the causes of violence is settler vigilante action in response to, usually unrelated, acts of Palestinian violence.

Human rights group B'Tselem says that the violence is "a means to harass and intimidate Palestinians" and that the evacuations are a necessary part of the peace process. According to B'Tselem, when a building is evacuated by the Israeli government, settlers lash out at Palestinians because they're "easy victims" and as a means to widen the area under settler control.

Ghassan Daghlas, a Palestinian Authority official who deals with the settlements issue in the northern West Bank, said, "These groups of settlers are organised and support each other...If there’s an outpost evacuation, they call people from Hebron to Jenin to stop the Palestinians working on their lands". Michael Sfard, a lawyer with Yesh Din, an Israeli human rights group which monitors the violation of human rights in the Palestinian territories, stated that there are between a few dozen and a few hundred extremist settlers using a tactic called price-tagging: if the government sends police or soldiers to dismantle an outpost that is being built, the settlers make the Palestinian population pay the price. While people in the outpost are confronting the security forces, others start harassing Palestinians, forcing commanders to divert men from the outpost and making them think twice about launching future operations. It’s such a big headache that many of the relevant authorities give up without trying and the outposts are quickly rebuilt once the army gives up and leaves.

Criticism of violence by settler leaders

The violence by extremist settlers against Palestinians has been condemned by leading religious, political and municipal figures in the West Bank, including Rabbi Menachem Fruman of Tekoa, who said: "Targeting Palestinians and their property is a shocking thing, (...) It's an act of hurting humanity. (...) This builds a wall of fire between Jews and Arabs." According to former Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon, "most of those extreme right wing activists" are not settlers and do not represent the settlements community.

The Yesha Council and former Knesset member Hanan Porat has also condemned violence against Palestinians. "The 'price tag' response is immoral", Porat said. "It's unheard of that one needs to burn the vineyards and fields of Arabs. It's immoral ... and it gives legitimacy to those who are interested in undermining the outpost issue. It's a very grave matter."

Yesha Council is the umbrella organization of municipal councils of Jewish settlements in the West Bank. Council chairman Dani Dayan said that settlers must not use violence to advance their means. He said that such actions were "morally bankrupt" and serve only to "hinder the settlers' struggle".

Differing legal status and treatment of Israeli settlers and Palestinians

Unlike Palestinians, Israeli civilians living in the Palestinian Territories are not subject to military or local law, but are prosecuted according to Israeli civilian penal law. This originates in the Emergency Regulations bill enacted in 1967 and extended since which gives extraterritorial rights to Israelis in the occupied territories. B'Tselem has said that the difference in legal status of Israelis and Palestinians in the territories has led to a double standard in which Israelis are given more legal rights and are punished more lightly than the Palestinians who are subject to military and local law. B'Tselem notes the system violates the principles of equality before the law and territoriality.

Referring to settler violence during the police evacuation of the "Federman Farm" near Kiryat Arba, Haaretz has stated in an editorial "Israeli society has become accustomed to giving lawbreaking settlers special treatment", noting that no other group could similarly attack Israeli law enforcement agencies without being severely punished. Haaretz has characterized settler violence on soldiers and policemen who participated in the evacuation of the "Federman Farm" as "terrorism".

In response to the violence directed towards Israeli security forces, Israel declared it would no longer fund any illegal outposts from November, 2008.

After the evacuation of settlers from Hebron in December 2008, a riot ensued and a Jewish settler, Ze'ev Braude, was recorded on video shooting two unarmed Palestinians after Palestinians had hurled rocks at him. The victims were shot on their own property, which Braude had entered, and later needed surgery. The Israeli State Prosecutor's Office decided to abandon the prosecution of Braude after the Israeli High Court of Justice ruled that the prosecution must give the defendant access to "sensitive information". The prosecutor's office had earlier said that some of the evidence against Braude was classified for security reasons, due to "the Shin Bet's sources and methods of operation, and identifying details about its units and people". Braude had petitioned the High Court for access.

Law enforcement action against settlers

The United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict reported on rioting and violence in the West Bank in the period preceding the Israeli military operations in Gaza. The report said "Little if any action is taken by the Israeli authorities to investigate, prosecute and punish violence against Palestinians, including killings, by settlers and members of the security forces, resulting in a situation of impunity. The Mission concludes that Israel has failed to fulfil its obligations to protect the Palestinians from violence by private individuals under both international human rights law and international humanitarian law. The report also stated that the International Court of Justice advisory opinion and "a number of United Nations resolutions have all affirmed that Israel’s practice of constructing settlements - in effect, the transfer by an occupying Power of parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies - constitutes a breach of the Fourth Geneva Convention".

According to Amos Harel, attempts by the security forces to bring violent right-wing zealots to justice have suffered from two main problems: investigating Israelis as opposed to Palestinians is subject to more restrictions, and courts have proved to be lenient. Human rights nonprofit Yesh Din has produced a report, "A Semblance of Law", which found problems with law enforcement actions against Israelis in the West Bank. According to Yesh Din's study, which was conducted in 2005, among complaints against Israelis, more than 90% were closed without indictments mainly due to perpetrators not being found, 5% were lost and never investigated, and 96% of trespassing cases (including sabotage of trees) and 100% of vandalism and other property offense complaints led to no indictment.

As well as collecting statistics, Yesh Din examined 42 closed investigation files and found a number of shortcomings, including the use of Hebrew to record testimonies given in Arabic; frequent failure to check the scene where the alleged offense took place; often not taking down eye-witness testimonies; widespread lack of recourse to live identification line-ups with suspected Israeli civilians; hardly any confrontations between complainants and suspects; failure to check alibis; hasty closure of files shortly after the complaint was registered: closing of files even when evidence was sufficient to indict suspects: police refusing to register complaints, and pressure from the Civilian Administration being used to avoid filing complaints.

8% of complaints resulted in indictments. The Israeli Justice Ministry responded by stating that legal authorities were closely following specific cases, but said that it was not in its authority to deal with every case.

Israeli security sources have said that it has become customary for some settlers to take the law into their own hands in the wake of Palestinian terror attacks in the West Bank.

In 2008–2009, the defense establishment began taking a harder line against unruly settlers.

In 2012, two EU heads of mission reports stated that Israel's security operations in the occupied territories had failed to protect the Palestinian population; it accused Israel of setting up its operations to minimize the impact on settlers of an ongoing campaign of settler violence. The reports noted that, "Over 90% of monitored complaints regarding settler violence filed by Palestinians with the Israeli police in recent years have been closed without indictment", and further added that, "discriminatory protections and privileges for settlers compound these abuses and create an environment in which settlers can act with apparent impunity".

Administrative detention

Following an attack by settlers on an IDF army base on 13 December 2011, the Israeli government authorized administrative detention and military trial for settlers who engaged in violent actions, similar to the treatment accorded Palestinian activists who engage in similar behavior. The IDF was granted the power to arrest violent settlers and plans were announced to increase security on the West Bank and restrict access by known troublemakers. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu characterized the situation as a handful of extremists in a population of generally law-abiding settlers. Five West Bank Israelis who are alleged to have planned and participated in the attack on the army base were indicted by the District Court of Jerusalem on 8 January 2012.

Settler riots

Israeli withdrawals from Gaza (in 2005) and an eviction in Hebron (in 2008) triggered settler rioting in protest. There is also continual conflict between settlers and Palestinians over land, resources and perceived grievances. In August 2007, soldiers clashed with settlers during a raid in Hebron. Paint and eggs were thrown at the soldiers.

A violent settler protest at the Palestinian village of Funduk occurred in November 2007, in which hundreds of extremist settlers converged at the entrance of the village and rampaged after 29-year-old local settler Ido Zoldan was shot dead in his car by Palestinian gunmen at the entrance to Funduk. The settlers smashed the windows of houses and cars. According to Funduk villagers, Israeli soldiers and police accompanied the protesters but mostly stood aside while the settlers rampaged.

In December 2008, Hebron settlers angry at the eviction of settlers from a disputed house rioted, shooting three Palestinian rock-throwers and burning Palestinian homes and olive groves. Video footage of the attacks was recorded, leading to widespread condemnation in Israel. The attacks were characterized as "a pogrom" by Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert, who said he was ashamed "as a Jew."

Local Palestinians stated that once the disputed house was evicted, the IDF and the police were "indifferent" to the violence against the Palestinians and have made no real attempt to stop the settlers from rioting.

Some settlers have publicly adopted a "price tag" policy whereby settlers attack Palestinian villages in retaliation after settler outposts are removed by the Israeli government.

In April 2009, dozens of settlers from Bat Ayin rampaged through the West Bank village of Safa, smashing car windows, damaging homes and wounding 12 Palestinians. An Israeli army spokeswoman said that the violence started when Palestinians threw stones at Bat Ayin settlers praying on a nearby hill before the Jewish Passover holiday.

The United Nations has warned that as many as 250,000 Palestinians in 83 villages are "highly or moderately" vulnerable to settler retaliation if the unauthorized outposts in the West Bank are removed by the Israeli government. A total of 75,900 Palestinians in 22 villages are "highly vulnerable." The report also warns that a number of roads around Palestinian villages may become dangerous for the Palestinians to use. The settlements of Havat Gilad, Kedumim, Itamar, Yitzhar, Ma'aleh Levona, Shilo, Adei Ad, Nokdim, Bat Ayin, Negohot, Kiryat Arba, Beit Haggai, Carmel, and Susya are considered possible threats to nearby Palestinians. The report criticizes "the inadequate level of law enforcement by the Israeli authorities" and "the ambiguous message delivered by the Government of Israel and the IDF top officials to the security forces in the field regarding their authority and responsibility to enforce the law on Israeli settlers."

Involvement of youths

Some settlers who attacked or harassed Palestinians are disaffected young adults called the Hilltop Youth by the Israeli media. In 2008, welfare minister Isaac Herzog labeled them a "security threat" as well as a "societal and educational danger." In December 2011, following an outbreak of settler violence against IDF property and personnel, Israeli defense minister Ehud Barak said, "There is no doubt that we are talking about terrorists."

Attacks on Palestinian agriculture and property

A car set on fire by Israeli settlers during the Huwara rampage
Graffiti reading "Die Arab Sand-Niggers!" reportedly sprayed by settlers on a house in Hebron.
Graffiti reading "Gas the Arabs! JDL" reportedly sprayed by settlers on the Qurtuba girls school in Hebron

Agriculture

See also: Olive cultivation in Palestine

Olive farming is a major industry and employer in the Palestinian West Bank and olive trees are a common target of settler violence. According to OCHA roughly 10,000 Palestinian West Bank olive trees and saplings have suffered either uprooting or damage from Israeli attacks in 2013, a rise from about 8,500 trees damaged in 2012. B'Tselem alleges that "olive pickers in areas near certain settlements and outposts in the West Bank have been a target of attacks by settlers, who have cut down and burned olive trees and stolen the crops", and that "security forces have not taken suitable action to prevent the violence". The IDF barred olive picking in extensive areas of land, stating that the closures were to protect the olive pickers. The case went to the Israeli High Court in 2006 which found that, as a rule, lands are not to be closed because of settler violence, and that the IDF must enforce the law. According to B'Tselem the IDF has worked around this by saying the lands are closed to protect the settlers.

Amnesty International has said that scores of Palestinian-owned sheep as well as gazelles and other animals were poisoned with fluoracetamide near Tuwani on 22 March 2005, depriving Palestinian farmers of their livelihood.

In July 2009, a group of Israeli settlers riding horses and carrying torches raided Palestinian areas, burning 1,500-2,000 olive trees and stoning cars.

In March 2011, two EU heads-of-mission reports detailed a tripling of violent settler attacks over three years. The report found that the attacks were especially aimed at Palestinian farmers and their livelihood in a systematic campaign of violence and intimidation which included the destruction of over 10,000 olive trees in the preceding year. The report noted that the Israeli state had "so far failed to effectively protect the Palestinian population". According to a confidential IDF document for just the period from 11 Sept. - 20 October 2013, the following Palestinian olive groves, near Israeli settlements near Elon Moreh, Karnei Shomron, Kedumim, Ma'on, and the Ma'on Farm, Susya, Shavei Shomron, Zayit Ra'anan, the Gilad Farm, Shilo, and Yitzhar, and all under IDF guard, were damaged, but were not reported in the media:

  • 11 Sept.: 500 trees burned on land belonging to the village of Deir al-Khatab.
  • 15 Sept.: 17 olive trees chopped down on land belonging to the village of Kafr Laqif.
  • 17 Sept.: 18 olive trees chopped down on land belonging to the village of Kafr Laqif.
  • 20 Sept.: 27 olive trees burned in Kafr Qaddum.
  • 21 Sept.: 70 trees chopped down in Kafr Qaddum.
  • 2 Oct.: Serious damage to several olive trees on land belonging to the Raba'i family.
  • 2 Oct.: Serious damage to about 30 olive trees in the village of Jit.
  • 3 Oct.: 48 olive trees of the Shatat family chopped down.
  • 5 Oct.: Serious damage to 130 olive trees of the Fukha family.
  • 5 Oct.: 15 olive trees chopped down and olives stolen in the village of Deir Sharaf.
  • 7 Oct.: Serious damage to about 60 olive trees and olives stolen in the village of Jit.
  • 7 Oct.: Serious damage to eight olive trees on land belonging to the village of Ras Karkar.
  • 7 Oct.: 35 olive trees in the village of Far'ata chopped down, and about a quarter of the olive crop stolen.
  • 8 Oct.: About 400 olive trees in the village of Jalud set on fire.
  • 13-14 Oct.: Olive trees and grapevines vandalized in the village of Far'ata.
  • 20 Oct.: Yitzhar settlers assaulted Palestinians and human rights volunteers as they harvested olives, leaving two farmers and two volunteers - a 71-year-old man and an 18-year-old woman - injured.

According to Yesh Din, 97.4% of complaints submitted to Israeli police by Palestinians who had suffered damage to their olive groves between 2005 and 2013 were closed without indictment.

Aftermath of Israeli settler attack on al-Mughayyir, April 2024

Well contamination and water access

Main article: Well poisoning

On 13 July 2004, residents of Hirbat Atwana near Hebron found rotting chicken carcasses in their well after four Jewish settlers were seen in the village. Israeli police said they suspected militant Jews from a nearby settlement outpost called Havat Maon. Settlers blamed the action on "internal tribal fight between the Palestinians;" Israeli police spokesman Doron Ben-Amo said it was "unlikely" that the Palestinians would contaminate their own well. On 9 December 2007, members of Christian Peacemaker Teams, an American NGO, reported to have observed a group of Israelis stop next to a cistern in Humra Valley, open the lid, and raise the bucket. The water was later found to be contaminated. Oxfam, a British NGO, has reported that settlers deliberately poisoned the only well in Madama, a village near Nablus, by dumping used diapers into it; and that they shot aid workers who came to clean the well.

A United Nations survey released in March 2012 documented the increasing use of threats, violence and intimidation to deny Palestinians access to their water resources in the West Bank. The survey stated that Israeli settlers have been acting systematically to gain control of some 56 springs, most of which are located on private Palestinian land. The report noted that settler actions included "trespass, intimidation and physical assault, stealing of private property, and construction without a building permit". The report criticized the Israeli authorities for having "systematically failed to enforce the law on those responsible for these acts and to provide Palestinians with any effective remedy".

Civilian casualty

OCHA reported, from 1 January to 19 September 2023, Israeli settlers and forces killed 189 Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and wounded 8,192. OCHA also said on average, there are three cases of settlers attacking Palestinians in the West Bank of the Jordan River every day, resulting in the killing and injuring of Palestinians, harming their property, and preventing them from reaching their land, workplace, family, and friends.

Attacks on mosques

In December 2009, suspected settler extremists attacked a mosque in the northern West Bank village of Yasuf near Nablus, according to Palestinian officials and Israeli police. The people forced their way into the mosque and burned about 100 holy books, including Korans, Hadiths, and prayer carpets, and spray-painted anti-Palestinian slogans on the floor, some of which referred to the settlers' "price tag" policy.

In January 2010, Israeli security officers raided the settlement of Yitzhar, forcibly entered the settlement's synagogue and yeshiva buildings and arrested ten settlers, including the Rosh yeshiva, for alleged involvement in the mosque attack. All were released by the court due to lack of evidence and the court reprimanded the police for arresting the rabbi. As of January 2010, no indictments were served. The state has appealed the ruling.

In September 2011, the Al-Nurayn Mosque in Qusra became the subject of an arson attack allegedly perpetrated by militant Jewish settlers, who set the mosque on fire by throwing two burning tyres through its windows. Slogans in Hebrew threatening further attacks had been graffitied on the walls, reading "Muhammad is a Pig". A star of David had also been graffitied alongside. The attack came hours after Israeli police dismantled three structures in the nearby illegal Jewish settlement of Migron, leading newspapers to suggest that it may have been carried out by settlers in retaliation.

On 12 November, the Al-Mughayyir mosque in the Ramallah and al-Bireh Governorate was damaged extensively when it was torched, reportedly by settlers in what was believed to be a price-tag attack. Israeli police say the incident does not match previous ‘price tag’ attacks, and that a full investigation was impossible because they were denied entry to the village by Palestinian authorities. According to Haaretz journalist Chaim Levinson, it was the 10th such mosque subject to arson in Israel and the West Bank since June 2011, and no investigation has ever led to an indictment. Settler violence has impeded Palestinians from visiting holy sites and worshipping at their mosques, and have interfered with muezzin calls for daily prayer.

Attacks on churches and monasteries

The growing ascendency of the right-wing in politics over the past decades has led to increasing attacks on non-Jewish religious properties, associated with "price tag" attacks by settlers and their sympathizers, with a rise in attacks on churches throughout the West Bank and Jerusalem, extending even to Israel. The Patriarch of the Holy City of Jerusalem and all Palestine, Theophilos III has decried, "repeated" attacks on Christian and Muslim places of worship in the Palestinian territories by extremist Jewish settlers. Christians who have suffered such abuses often charge Israeli authorities with "not doing enough" to safeguard the population and prevent further attacks by Jews. Arab-Israeli member of the Knesset Ayman Odeh observes, "Harassment and harming of places that are holy to Islam and Christianity have become almost constant, and no one is held accountable", and directly blames the Israeli government for "leading the hatred and approving, with a wink, the continuation of the hate crimes against the Arab minority in the state".

Settler claims of orchestrated vandalism

A settler group named Tazpit Unit stated to have documented Palestinians destroying trees with the intention of blaming settlers for the destruction. Photos taken by the group allegedly show Palestinians and left-wing activists cutting down Palestinian olive trees using an electric saw. The settlers stated that many of the reported "price tag" operations by settlers were actually carried out by Palestinians with the aim of tarnishing the settlers' image.

Israeli settlers were accused by an Arab farmer of having gathered his sheep into an area thick with brush and setting fire to the bushes, burning alive his 12 pregnant ewes. The police questioned the farmer's description of religious settlers wearing skullcaps driving a car on Sabbath, as Orthodox Jews do not drive on this day. Caroline Glick writing in the Jerusalem Post reported that the farmer later admitted that he lost control of a brush fire that was responsible for the damage. Israeli media network Arutz Sheva said this incident exposed the tactic of leftists of accepting Arab claims and falsely accusing Jews.

In March 2012, two Arab males of Beit Zarzir confessed, after being arrested, to damaging a local school for Arab and Jewish students. They admitted responsibility for having sprayed on the wall of the school, "Death to Arabs". The school was sprayed twice in February with the slogans "price tag", "Death to Arabs", and "Holocaust to the Arabs".

Settler extremism

See also: Zionist political violence and Jewish religious terrorism

Extremist groups associated with the settler movement included the Gush Emunim Underground, which existed from 1979 to 1984 as a militant organization linked to the settler activist group Gush Emunim. They carried out attacks against Jewish students and Palestinian officials, attempted to bomb a bus and planned an attack on the Dome of the Rock.

The New York Times has noted that the religious, ideological wing of the settler movement is growing more radical. It is widely suspected that a pipe-bomb attack on settler critic Zeev Sternhell was perpetrated by settler radicals, who left fliers at the scene offering 1 million shekels to anyone who "kills a member of anti-settlement group Peace Now". Public Security Minister Avi Dichter condemned the attack, calling it a "nationalistic terror attack".

Shin Bet security chief Yuval Diskin warned that he has "found a very high willingness among this public to use violence - not just stones, but live weapons - in order to prevent or halt a diplomatic process". He also called settlers' mindset "messianic" and "Satanic".

In 2008, Gadi Shamni, a senior Israeli commander in the occupied West Bank, warned that the number of violent settlers had increased from a few dozen to hundreds, and that this rise was impairing the IDF's ability to address other threats.

In August 2012, the United States defined settler attacks as 'terrorist incidents'.

In July 2014, a day after the burial of three murdered Israeli teens, Mohammed Abu Khdeir, a 16-year-old Palestinian, was forced into a car on an East Jerusalem street by 3 Israelis, two teenagers led by a 30-year-old settler from the West Bank settlement of Adam. His family immediately reported the fact to Israeli Police who located his charred body a few hours later at Givat Shaul in the Jerusalem Forest. Preliminary results from the autopsy suggested that he was beaten and burnt while still alive. The murder suspects explained the attack as a response to the June abduction and murder of three Israeli teens. The murders contributed to a breakout of hostilities in the 2014 Israel–Gaza conflict. While it has become a standard operating procedure in Israel to bulldoze the homes of suspected terrorists and their families, and while Khdeir's mother requested their houses be demolished, none of the perpetrators' homes were targeted for demolition. While Palestinians are tried in military courts, West Bank settlers are tried in Israel in civil courts, and no Jewish terrorist homes have been demolished. Demolition, the state has argued, does not apply to Jewish suspects of terrorism, because "there is no need to deter potential Jewish terrorists". The European Union criticized Israel for "failing to protect the Palestinian population".

In July 2015, a similar incident happened where Israeli settlers committed an arson attack on two Palestinian houses, killing 3 people, including 18-month-old Ali Saad Dawabsheh who was burned alive, and both of his parents who died from their injuries later on.

Threats of rape and sexual violence

On 24 August 2017, settlers from Kiryat Arba employed a loudspeaker system to verbally harass Palestinian residents of the al-Hariqah neighborhood in Hebron. A Palestinian volunteer for Israeli human rights organization B'Tselem recorded segments of the incident from her window, which led the settlers to target their abuse at her. They threatened violence and used racist and misogynistic language, including explicit threats such as, "The biggest dick will screw you. Come, come, come, come. We're waiting for you, you whore All the Jews are waiting for you here." Despite the severity of the threats and harassment, Israeli security forces present at the scene did not intervene, allowing the settlers to continue their actions undisturbed.

On 13 May 2021, around 10 settlers gathered near the fence erected by the Israeli military around a Palestinian neighborhood in Hebron, throwing stones at passersby and nearby homes while several soldiers observed without intervening. After approximately an hour and a half, the soldiers left without making any arrests or addressing the settlers' actions. The settlers continued to throw stones on the street that night and in the following days, while both settlers and soldiers subjected Palestinians documenting the events to verbal harassment with homophobic, transphobic and sexist slurs.

On 12 October 2023, settlers dressed in army uniforms detained three Palestinians from the West Bank village of Wadi as-Seeq: Mohammad Khaled, 27, Abu Hassan, 46, both employees of the Palestinian Authority, and a local resident aged 30. All of them reported severe mistreatment during their detention. Khaled described the abuse, stating, "They had an iron pipe and knives, which they also used to hit us. They beat us everywhere, hands, chest, and head too. Everywhere. They stubbed out cigarettes on us. They tried to pull out my fingernails." Hassan compared the abuse to the Abu Ghraib prison, saying, "You heard about the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq? It's exactly like what happened there. Abu Ghraib with the army." He also recounted, "They poured water on us, urinated on us, and then someone holding a stick tried to shove it up my rear. I fought with all my strength until he simply gave up." A photograph taken during their detention was posted on the Facebook page of Metzuda – the Security World of Israel, showing the detainees and captioned, "A terrorist penetration incident at the Ben Pazi farm near Kochav Hashachar. Our forces captured the terrorists." The image was later removed.

On 17 April 2024, Human Rights Watch reported that the Israeli military either participated in or failed to protect Palestinians from violent settler attacks in the West Bank, resulting in the displacement of people from 20 communities and the complete uprooting of at least seven communities since October 2023. Settlers were involved in assaults, torture, sexual violence, theft of property and livestock, threats of permanent expulsion, and the destruction of homes and schools. Bill Van Esveld, associate children's rights director at Human Rights Watch, stated, "Settlers and soldiers have displaced entire Palestinian communities, destroying every home, with the apparent backing of higher Israeli authorities." He also noted, "While the attention of the world is focused on Gaza, abuses in the West Bank, fueled by decades of impunity and complacency among Israel's allies, are soaring."

On 25 July 2024, Australia joined Europe and the United States in imposing sanctions on Israeli settlers accused of beatings, sexual assault and torture of Palestinians in the occupied West Bank. Australia's Foreign Minister Penny Wong declared financial sanctions and travel restrictions on seven individuals along with the Hilltop Youth settler group. "The individuals sanctioned today have been involved in violent attacks on Palestinians," Wong said. "This includes beatings, sexual assault and torture of Palestinians resulting in serious injury and in some cases, death." The decision aligned with measures taken by the US, Britain, Canada, and the European Union, all of which had also imposed sanctions on Israeli settlers.

On 4 August 2024, a masked settler on horseback arrived at Khirbet Wadi a-Rakhim in the South Hebron Hills, herding approximately 20 cows into a barley field owned by the Harini family. Shortly thereafter, three additional settlers, including the identified Shem Tov Luski, arrived by car. The settlers, some carrying clubs, approached the Harini family's home, claiming ownership of the land, house, and well, and engaging in verbal abuse. Luski also sexually harassed a family member, making references to the military detention facility Sde Teiman and threatening sexual violence with comments such as, "You look so fresh. So sweet. I'll be happy to sit with you in jail someday. I would be happy. You know Sde Teiman? Ooh-ooh. Rape in the name of God." Despite calls to the police from residents and international activists, no officers were dispatched, and the residents were advised to file a complaint at the Kiryat Arba police station.

International reactions

In December 2011, following a briefing to the United Nations Security Council, all of the regional and political groupings seated at the council issued statements expressing dismay at violence by settlers and right-wing activists, naming the issue as an obstacle to the resumption of peace talks.

In one of a number of statements on the issue, the EU expressed "deep concern regarding settler extremism and incitement by settlers in the West Bank". The statement further added that "the EU condemns continuous settler violence and deliberate provocations against Palestinian civilians. It calls on the government of Israel to bring the perpetrators to justice and to comply with its obligations under international law."

International sanctions

Main article: List of sanctions involving Israel

Israeli settler violence received greater attention by the US government following the outbreak of the Israel–Hamas war in October 2023. While Rights groups have demanded US Secretary of State Blinken to punish Israeli settlement groups for their actions against Palestinians in the West Bank, many have also stressed that the sanctions do not go far enough because the Israeli government supports the settlements itself. On 5 December 2023, Blinken introduced new visa restrictions regarding entry to the US of persons who committed acts of violence in the West Bank. On 1 February 2024, US President Biden issued an executive order due to high levels of settler violence, forced displacement of Palestinians, and property destruction in the West Bank. The order imposes sanctions on foreign persons determined to be responsible for or complicit in actions that threaten the peace, security, or stability of the West Bank. It blocks their property interests in the US, suspends their entry into the country and prohibits transactions with sanctioned persons. The stated objective is to address events regarded by the administration as "an unusual and extraordinary threat" undermining US foreign policy objectives and threatening security in the region.

A neighbor of "Havat Emek Tirzah" tells of a meeting with the owner of the farm, Moshe Sharvit, on whom American and British  sanctions were imposed. In the incident, Moshe under false pretenses for soldiers to enter her house and attacked her with a stone. Question: What happened here yesterday? Answer: I wanted to enter the house, the army came and said that a sheep had been stolen and said that there was a terrorist inside. They went inside and searched the house but found nothing.  And he threw a stone and hit me here (shows his left hand, there is bleeding). Question: Who hurt? Answer: Musa the settler

Sanctions were announced in February 2024 by the United Kingdom against extremist Israeli settlers who have violently attacked Palestinians in the West Bank. The sanctions include financial and travel restrictions with four settlers being sanctioned initially after documentation showed they engaged in systematic intimidation and violence against Palestinians; at times at gunpoint, to make them leave their homes. Further sanctions against violent settlers were announced by the European Union on 19 April 2024 as the European Council blacklisted the right-wing organizations Lehava and Hilltop Youth and the individuals Meir Ettinger, Elisha Yered, Neria Ben Pazi and Yinon Levi. Because of violence against Palestinians in the West Bank and Jerusalem on February 28, France imposed sanctions against extremist Israeli settlers, including a ban on entering French territory. Also, Emanuel Macron's office said they are considering extending sanctions on Israeli settlers.

Statistics

The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs shows that more Palestinians were injured either by settlers or members of the Israeli security forces in attacks in the first six months of 2021 than in the whole of 2020 and about equal to the total for 2019. B'Tselem has logged a 33 per cent increase in attacks during the first six months of 2021 compared with the same period last year and said this was "enacted with an increasingly open cooperation by Israel’s security forces and with the full backing of Israeli authorities". On 19 October 2021, Linda Thomas-Greenfield told the United Nations Security Council "We are deeply concerned by the violence perpetrated by Israeli settlers in the West Bank against Palestinians and their property," and that "Reports of masked men terrorizing a village in Hebron, destroying homes and injuring children on September 28, and similar acts elsewhere in the West Bank, are abhorrent." She said that the US "appreciated the strong and unequivocal condemnation of this violence by Foreign Minister Lapid, Defense Minister Gantz, and others in the Israeli government," while urging Israel "to investigate these incidents fully, including the response by Israeli security forces."

On 14 November 2021, a report by B'Tselem detailed the takeover of nearly 11 square miles (28 km) of farm and pasture land by settlers over the past five years and that recent months have seen a steep increase in violence committed by Jewish settlers. The NGO said that Israel has been using settler violence as a "major informal tool" to drive Palestinians from farming and pasture lands in the occupied West Bank. Haaretz asked the Israel Defense Forces, the police and the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories for a response to the report's conclusion that violence from the outposts and isolated farms serves the state. The IDF Spokesperson's Office said: "The IDF invests a lot of effort in attempts to eradicate the violent incidents in the area, and is in direct contact with the various civilian and security entities in these areas. The IDF will continue to operate in the region, in order to enable law and security in the area." The police and COGAT declined to comment.

Settler violence increased following the election of the thirty-seventh government of Israel in December 2022, which was notable for its inclusion of far-right politicians and support for expanding Israeli settlements in the Palestinian territories. Settler violence increased further following Hamas's attack on Israel on 7 October 2023. B'Tselem told BBC News that in first six days since the attack, there was an "organised effort by settlers to use the fact that the entire international and local attention is focused on Gaza and the north of Israel to try to seize land in the West Bank" and had recorded at least 46 incidents in which settlers threatened, physically attacked or damaged the property of Palestinians. United Nations officials say that since the attacks, the Israel Defense Forces and armed settlers killed more than 120 Palestinians in the West Bank, with most deaths occurring in clashes with Israeli soldiers.

See also

Notes

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  2. "Amnesty International's annual report on Israel and the Occupied Territories". 24 May 2007. Retrieved 28 October 2015.
  3. Harel, Amos (19 November 2021). "Settler Attacks on Palestinian Spike, Reflecting Israel's Systemic Failure". Haaretz. Retrieved 21 November 2023.
  4. ^ Donnison, Jon (17 November 2011). "Concerns over rising settler violence in the West Bank". BBC. Retrieved 25 March 2012.
  5. Daniel Byman, A High Price: The Triumphs and Failures of Israeli Counterterrorism, Oxford University Press/Saban Center, Brookings Institution, 2011 p. 292: 'Palestinian police are barred from responding to settler violence. This policy reduces friction between settlers and Palestinian authorities, but it decreases the overall credibility of the PA, which cannot defend its people from settler harassment and violence.'
  6. "Violence by Extremists in the Jewish Settler Movement: A Rising Challenge". The Washington Institute for Near East Policy. 25 November 2008. Retrieved 26 March 2012.
  7. Constance B. Hilliard, Does Israel have a future?: the case for a post-Zionist state, Potomac Books, Inc., 2009 p. 59.
  8. ^ "'Hundreds join' settler violence". BBC. 2 October 2008.
  9. ^ Weiss, Efrat (20 June 1995). "Rabbi slams Jewish 'hooligans' - Israel News, Ynetnews". Ynetnews. Ynetnews.com. Retrieved 14 September 2012.
  10. Amitai Etzioni, Security First: For a Muscular, Moral Foreign Policy, Yale University Press, 2008 p. 119.:'Others have justified violence against Arabs by citing the rule from the Talmud: "If a man comes to kill you, rise early, and kill him first."
  11. ^ Anshel Pfeffer,Top IDF officer warns: Settlers' radical fringe growing, Haaretz 20 October 2009.
  12. ^ Hider, James (21 March 2012). "Israel 'turning blind eye' to West Bank settlers' attacks on Palestinians". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
  13. Chaim Levinson, Gili Cohen and Jack Khoury , 'Palestinian mosque set on fire in suspected hate crime,' at Haaretz, 15 January 2014. 'The annual totals are up from 115 in 2006 to 399 in 2013..'
  14. Times of Israel Staff. “5-Year-Old Palestinian Boy Hurt by Rock Thrown at Car in Reported Settler Attack.” The Times of Israel, January 22, 2021. Times of Israel
  15. Duggal, Hanna; Ali, Marium. "Mapping 1,400 settler attacks in the occupied West Bank over the past year". Al Jazeera. Retrieved 10 October 2024.
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  19. ^ Gunter, Joel; Al-Khatib, Muath (27 May 2024). "'Exterminate the beasts': How Israeli settlers took revenge for a murder in the West Bank". BBC News. Retrieved 28 May 2024.
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  21. Multiple sources:
  22. See for example Kretzmer, David, "The occupation of justice: the Supreme Court of Israel and the Occupied Territories, SUNY Press, 2002, ISBN 0-7914-5337-5, ISBN 978-0-7914-5337-7, page 83
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  24. See Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, and relating to the Protection of Victims of International Armed Conflicts (Protocol I), 8 June 1977
  25. Hillier, Tim "Sourcebook on public international law", Routledge, 1998, ISBN 1-85941-050-2, ISBN 978-1-85941-050-9, page 627-628
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  33. Daniel Byman, A High Price: The Triumphs and Failures of Israeli Counterterrorism, Oxford University Press, 2011 p. 289.
  34. Cheryl Rubenberg, The Palestinians: In Search of a Just Peace, Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2003 p. 385.
  35. Nur Masalha,Imperial Israel and the Palestinians: The Politics of Expansion, Pluto Press, 2000 p. 118.
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