In Gaza’s shadow, sanctions target West Bank settlers

A picture shows a view of the Israeli settler unauthorised outpost of Meitarim Farm near Hebron city in the occupied West Bank on February 14, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 17 February 2024
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In Gaza’s shadow, sanctions target West Bank settlers

  • Around 490,000 Israelis live in dozens of West Bank settlements that are deemed illegal under international law

KIRYAT ARBA, Palestinian Territories: Israeli settler Ely Federman probably doesn’t know it yet, but he is under international sanction.
While he is at war for Israel in Gaza, Britain has frozen his assets in the United Kingdom as part of a rare move targeting violent Israeli settlers.
On Monday Britain announced the sanctions, which include travel and visa bans, against Federman and three other “extremist Israeli settlers” accused of human rights abuses against Palestinians.
The United Kingdom’s foreign ministry said Federman had been involved in “multiple incidents” against Palestinian shepherds in the South Hebron Hills of the Israeli-occupied West Bank.




A Palestinian man inspects a car damaged during a raid by Israeli security forces looking for wanted militants in the village of Sir, south of Jenin, in the occupied West Bank on February 13, 2024. (AFP)

Federman is a name well known among the radical right linked to attacks on Palestinians. Noam Federman, Ely’s father, is a central figure on Israel’s extreme right who has been imprisoned several times.
Ely “knows nothing” about the sanctions. “He has no telephone” while he is in Gaza, Noam Federman told AFP at the settlement of Kyriat Arba, where he lives on the edge of Hebron.
“He’s driving vehicles that clear the terrain for tanks,” said Federman, who has a salt and pepper beard and wears a braided kippa.
He said he wasn’t surprised by Britain’s action.
“There has for several years been a campaign by anarchists and leftists against the ‘people of the hills’,” his term for the extremists.




A Palestinian looks at the damage of a house from an Israeli raid near Jenin, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, February 13, 2024. (REUTERS)

Around 490,000 Israelis live in dozens of West Bank settlements that are deemed illegal under international law. They live alongside around three million Palestinians in the territory.
Palestinians view Israeli settlements as a war crime and a major obstacle to peace, but many national-religious hard-liners see living there as fulfilling a divine promise.
Israel captured the West Bank, along with the Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem, in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war.

Since the attack by Hamas militants against Israel triggered the war on October 7, Palestinians have accused Western governments of not putting enough pressure on Israel to prevent civilian deaths from its retaliatory bombardment of Gaza.
Noam Federman sees the Western sanctions, then, as an attempt to show a “balanced” position toward Israel.
The British move came after Washington on February 1 sanctioned four Israeli settlers for violence against West Bank civilians, and France on Tuesday imposed penalties against 28.
Israeli settlers killed at least 10 Palestinians and torched dozens of homes in the occupied West Bank in 2023, making it the “most violent” year on record for settler attacks, according to the Israeli human rights group Yesh Din.
Among those targeted by both Britain and the United States is the son-in-law of Noam Federman, Yinon Levy.
They accused him of leading settlers from the unauthorized outpost of Meitarim Farm who have assaulted Palestinian and Bedouin civilians, burned their fields and destroyed their property.
Levy founded the wildcat settlement in 2021, at the southernmost point of the West Bank.
He lives there with his wife Sapir, three horses, around 200 lambs, and security cameras that emit a powerful “bip bip” sounds when strangers near.
Local media suspect Levy of links to the dismantlement of Khirbet Zanuta, a Palestinian village a few hundred meters (yards) away.
Khirbet Zanuta falls within what is known as Area C, the part of the West Bank under complete Israeli control. The village has received numerous official demolition orders in the past.
Finally an unknown group took apart the village and its makeshift homes at the end of October.
“The settlers made life very hard for us,” said Fayez Al-Til, head of the local council. Til welcomed Western sanctions against the settlers.

The Israeli watchdog group Peace Now on Thursday said Israeli settlers established a record number of 26 wildcat outposts — settlements not officially approved — in the occupied West Bank last year.
Peace Now said that figure includes around 10 since war in the Gaza Strip broke out on October 7.
Such outposts sometimes begin with a simple mobile home, and expand as other settlers move to the area.
Settler violence against Palestinians has increased since the war started.
Under the sanctions, the accounts of Levy and his wife have been frozen, since the bank has a branch in the United States and is part of the global financial messaging service, SWIFT.
The Israeli parliament’s economic affairs committee on Wednesday held an urgent meeting about Levy.
David Bitan, the committee head and a member of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud Party, said the government has to act “otherwise it won’t stop.”
Levy and his wife can no longer use their bank cards, but they have received donations “not only from settlers but from all Israel,” Noam Federman said, denouncing the “robbery” perpetrated against them through the sanctions.
He foresees the same problem for his son Ely, at war in Gaza.
“What is going to happen when his salary has to be paid in a frozen bank account?” Federman asked. “He’s a soldier. This will be very embarrassing, I think, for the Israeli army.”
 

 


Nations must stop arming Sudan factions, ICC should deliver Gaza justice, EU envoy Kajsa Ollongren tells Arab News

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Nations must stop arming Sudan factions, ICC should deliver Gaza justice, EU envoy Kajsa Ollongren tells Arab News

  • EU special representative for human rights warns governments are flouting multilateral rules designed to safeguard civilians during conflict
  • Kajsa Ollongren says EU must work with states committed to multilateralism and humanitarian law to preserve a rules-based global order

NEW YORK CITY: Kajsa Ollongren, the EU special representative for human rights, has warned that Sudan is enduring “atrocities beyond imagination,” urging all countries supplying arms to the warring factions to immediately halt transfers.

Speaking to Arab News following missions to Lebanon and Egypt and a human rights dialogue with Saudi Arabia, Ollongren said foreign weapons are fueling one of the world’s most devastating and under-reported conflicts, with no political resolution in sight.

Her comments came shortly after Volker Turk, the UN high commissioner for human rights, issued one of his starkest warnings yet that Sudan faces “another wave of atrocities,” with civilians facing ethnic cleansing and mass displacement.

Turk has repeatedly cautioned that the violence could reach “catastrophic levels” if the flow of weapons continues. Ollongren said these warnings match what she has heard from regional human rights personnel.

“The atrocities are really beyond your imagination,” she told Arab News. “For a long time, the world did not pay enough attention to what was happening in Sudan. We are paying attention now, at least, but attention alone will not stop it.”

She said that governments enabling the conflict must be confronted. “There also has to be genuine interaction with those countries providing weapons. Without those weapons, we would see an end to the atrocities sooner … It’s unacceptable.”

She said coordinated pressure from Europe, the Gulf, and the wider international community is essential. “It’s very important, at the Gulf level, in Europe, and globally, to call for a stop to arms exports,” she added.

The conflict in Sudan began in April 2023 when a power struggle between armed forces chief Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and his former deputy Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, head of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, erupted into open conflict.

About 12 million people have been displaced, according to UN figures, creating what many consider to be the world’s worst humanitarian catastrophe. Death toll estimates vary widely, with the former US envoy for Sudan suggesting as many as 400,000 have been killed.

Although the Sudanese Armed Forces have reclaimed the capital, Khartoum, from the RSF, the country is effectively bisected, with the SAF-led government controlling the east and the RSF and allied militias dominating the west, including the troubled Darfur region.

October produced one of the most brutal episodes of the conflict, when RSF fighters captured El-Fasher, the capital of North Darfur, and began slaughtering civilians, triggering mass displacement.

Sudan has returned to the diplomatic spotlight following Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s recent visit to Washington, where he discussed developments with US President Donald Trump and urged a more active role in ending the conflict and preventing regional spillover.

Soon after, Trump announced that the US would “immediately start a new effort” to end the conflict in Sudan, which he described as “the most violent place on Earth and the single biggest humanitarian crisis” — a move widely interpreted as a response to the crown prince’s appeal.

“The fact that the president of the US comments this way about the atrocities is important, and it will be heard in Sudan,” Ollongren said.

But she cautioned that declarations alone are meaningless without serious follow-through. “It’s not enough to just declare an end to a war or conflict,” she said. “There has to be a plan — one that includes reconstruction, accountability, and rebuilding societies while empowering the victims.”

Turning to Lebanon, Ollongren said she sensed “momentum” during her recent meetings in Beirut, where diplomatic engagement has accelerated since the ceasefire in the Israel-Hezbollah war a year ago.

This comes despite Israel’s refusal to withdraw from southern Lebanon and its continued strikes against suspected Hezbollah positions, including last month’s attack on a Beirut neighborhood that killed a militia commander.

Hezbollah’s leaders insist they will not disarm until Israel withdraws its troops.

“There is momentum for more peace and stability and for a stable future for many countries in the region,” Ollongren said. “I see the role that Saudi Arabia is taking in all of this, and also Egypt’s efforts to negotiate between parties.”

Still, she emphasized the fragility of the situation. “There is still uncertainty about whether the ceasefire is being violated, and there is not yet a clear plan to disarm Hezbollah,” she said.

“Accountability is crucial. In Lebanon, we talked a lot about political assassinations and the Beirut port explosion. All of that has to be addressed with justice, because without it impunity persists, which can lead to further issues in the future.”

On Syria, which she plans to visit early next year, Ollongren said the situation remains unstable.

“We’ve seen violence and casualties in several parts of the country. It is not under control,” she said, referring to attacks on ethnic and religious minorities over the past year since the Assad regime was forced from power.

Although she welcomed the recent return of Syrian refugees from Lebanon as “a good sign,” she cautioned that broader stabilization remains distant as the transitional government of President Ahmad Al-Sharaa pursues national reintegration and sanctions relief.

Ollongren also highlighted Saudi Arabia’s growing diplomatic influence as one of the most significant shifts in the region. “Saudi Arabia is taking a different path,” she said, referencing Vision 2030 reforms and the Kingdom’s expanded global engagement.

“Saudi Arabia is also engaging with Europe and the EU, establishing ties that could be very important for a more stable Middle East.

“Of course, this also recalibrates the influence of other powers. Egypt has played a longstanding role but is struggling with its economy and population pressures. Saudi Arabia’s engagement could be very impactful.”

On Gaza, Ollongren described “complete destruction” and extremely limited access as challenges for media and humanitarian efforts. “We have not had independent journalists able to report on casualties or destruction,” she said.

“Bit by bit, more is coming out, and we see complete destruction in many parts of Gaza. People have no homes to return to and have lost a huge number of civilians, including children. There must be accountability.”

Israel launched its military operations in Gaza after the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on southern Israel, which killed 1,200 people and in which 250 were taken hostage. Since then, about 70,000 Palestinians have been killed, according to the Gaza health ministry.

A fragile ceasefire came into force on Oct. 10, with Israeli forces scaling back operations in exchange for Hamas releasing its remaining hostages. A small flow of humanitarian aid has been allowed into the territory, but medical, nutritional, and shelter needs remain immense.

Ollongren emphasized that accountability for alleged war crimes committed by both sides must be secured through the International Criminal Court.

“The ICC should play a role in this,” she said. “They have looked at both Hamas and Israel. That is the right place to seek justice and accountability.”

Asked whether European states support ICC arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former defense minister, Yoav Gallant, Ollongren said: “We are signatories to the Rome Statute, so we are bound by the treaty.

“The court decides on arrests, cases, and prosecutions independently. Our role is to ensure its independence and continued functioning. So yes.”

A growing number of legal scholars, including a UN independent international commission of inquiry, have concluded that genocide has taken place in Gaza over the past two years.

Francesca Albanese, the UN special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories, recently told Arab News that EU and Western responses to the genocide in Gaza have been “pathetic, hypocritical, and shaped by double standards.”

She said that the same governments invoking international law to condemn Russia’s actions in Ukraine have been largely silent on Gaza, allowing “egregious violations” to unfold.

Ollongren responded to the criticism. “We should, and we must, apply international law consistently in all cases,” she said.

“We feel the accusation of double standards. After the Oct. 7 attacks by Hamas, Europe was very supportive of Israel, recognizing its right to defend itself. But as the war in Gaza unfolded and civilian casualties mounted, we became more critical.

“The EU has increasingly called on Israel to abide by international humanitarian law and has worked to ensure humanitarian aid reaches those in need.

“At the same time, we support the Palestinian Authority in taking a governance role. I think we have now become a much more critical and fair partner for both sides.”

Asked whether the international system is failing, she said the problem lies not with institutions but with governments.

“The architecture we have needs to be protected,” she said. “We don’t need a new system. The problem is that it is not being respected. That is why it’s important for the EU to engage with countries that uphold the multilateral system, the rule of law, and international humanitarian law.

“These frameworks were designed to protect the most vulnerable in conflicts, not prevent wars.”

She concluded with a message to civilians in Gaza and Sudan.

“I understand that you have lost faith in the international system because it was not there to protect you when you were attacked and lost loved ones,” she said.

“It’s still the best system we have. From my side, I will focus on accountability and justice, because from a human rights perspective, that is what I must do for you.”