Palestinians fear settlement will wreck their town

The demolished house of Yahya Abu Ghaliyeh, a Palestinian from a Bedouin village near the town of Al-Eizariya, also known as Bethany, east of Jerusalem, in a photo taken on Sept. 30. (AFP)
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Updated 25 November 2025
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Palestinians fear settlement will wreck their town

  • The E1 plan has been condemned by several international leaders, with the UN chief’s spokesman saying it would pose an “existential threat” to a contiguous Palestinian state

AL-EIZARIYA: In a town near Jerusalem, a growing number of houses and businesses are receiving demolition and evacuation notices, and Palestinian residents link the drive to Israel’s approval of a major new settlement project.
“This is a project of total destruction for the economy and the people. It will affect everyone,” said Yahya Abu Ghaliyeh, whose home in Al-Eizariya town was demolished by Israeli authorities earlier this year.
Now, the 37-year-old’s car wash business is also due for demolition.
The notices say the buildings were constructed without permits, and no official Israeli statement links the demolition orders to the settlement project.
But Palestinian residents say such permits are nearly impossible to obtain from Israel, which has occupied the West Bank since 1967. They also link the impending demolitions to the E1 plan, one of the largest West Bank settlement projects ever approved by Israel.
The project, which aims to build approximately 3,400 housing units, will connect Jerusalem with nearby Maale Adumim, one of the largest Israeli settlements in the West Bank.
In August, Israel gave the green light to E1, a new construction project covering some 12 square kilometers to the east of Jerusalem.
The E1 plan has been condemned by several international leaders, with the UN chief’s spokesman saying it would pose an “existential threat” to a contiguous Palestinian state.
The move would further separate east Jerusalem, occupied and annexed by Israel and predominantly inhabited by Palestinians, from the West Bank.
Excluding east Jerusalem, 500,000 Israelis live in settlements throughout the West Bank. These settlements are illegal under international law.
The E1 project includes a new road between Jerusalem and Maale Adumim, which would not be accessible from Al-Eizariya, even though it runs through the town.
Khalil Tufakji, director of cartography at Jerusalem’s Arab Studies Society, said the project would ensure that Palestinians “cannot use the roads designated for Israelis,” describing it as “apartheid between Arabs and Jews.”
People traveling between Al-Eizariya and Jerusalem would have to take a circuitous route three times longer than the present journey, he said.

 


A man detonates explosive belt during arrest attempt in Iraq, injuring 2 security members

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A man detonates explosive belt during arrest attempt in Iraq, injuring 2 security members

  • The raid was being conducted in the Al-Khaseem area in Qaim district that borders Syria
  • No members of the security forces were killed

BAGHDAD: A man wearing an explosives belt blew himself up Friday while a security force was trying to arrest him in western Iraq near the Syrian border, killing himself and wounding two security members, an Iraqi security official said.
The raid was being conducted in the Al-Khaseem area in Qaim district that borders Syria, said the official who spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulations.
The official added that “preliminary information” confirms that no members of the security forces were killed, while two personnel were injured and transferred for medical treatment.
Iraq’s National Security Agency said in a statement that its members besieged a hideout of a Daesh group security official and two of his bodyguards. One bodyguard ignited his explosives belt, killing him. It gave no further details.
Daesh once controlled large parts of Syria and Iraq and declared a caliphate in 2014. The extremist group was defeated on the battlefield in Iraq in 2017 and in Syria in 2019 but its sleeper cells still carry out deadly attacks in both countries.
In December, two US service members and an American civilian were killed in an attack in Syria that the United States blamed on Daesh. The US carried out strikes on Syria days later in retaliation.
US and Iraqi authorities in January began transferring hundreds of the nearly 9,000 Daesh members held in jails run by the US-backed and Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces in northeast Syria to Iraq, where Iraqi authorities plan to prosecute them.