West Bank Bedouin community driven out by Israeli settler violence

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A Bedouin family loads a trailer as they dismantle a structure and gather their belongings to leave their homes after continues harassment from Israeli right-wing settlers in Ras Ein al-Auja, near the city of Jericho in the Israel-occupied Palestinian West Bank on January 11, 2026. (Photo by ILIA YEFIMOVICH / AFP)
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A Bedouin man gathers plastic sheeting as families begin to gather their belongings to leave their homes after continues harassment from Israeli right-wing settlers in Ras Ein al-Auja, near the city of Jericho in the Israel-occupied Palestinian West Bank on January 11, 2026. (Photo by ILIA YEFIMOVICH / AFP)
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Garbage is burnt as Bedouin families begin to gather their belongings to leave their homes after continues harassment from Israeli right-wing settlers in Ras Ein al-Auja, near the city of Jericho in the Israel-occupied Palestinian West Bank on January 11, 2026. (Photo by ILIA YEFIMOVICH / AFP)
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Updated 14 January 2026
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West Bank Bedouin community driven out by Israeli settler violence

  • With heavy hearts, Bedouins in a West Bank village dismantle their sheep pens and load belongings onto trucks, forced from their homes in the Israeli-occupied territory by rising settler violence

Ras ‘Ein al ‘Auja, Palestinian Territories: With heavy hearts, Bedouins in a West Bank village dismantle their sheep pens and load belongings onto trucks, forced from their homes in the Israeli-occupied territory by rising settler violence.
While attacks by Israeli settlers affect communities across the West Bank, the semi-nomadic Bedouins are among the territory’s most vulnerable, saying they suffer from forced displacement due in large part to a lack of law enforcement.
“What is happening today is the complete collapse of the community as a result of the settlers’ continuous and repeated attacks, day and night, for the past two years,” Farhan Jahaleen, a Bedouin in the village of Ras Ein Al-Auja, told AFP.
Since Israel took control of the West Bank in 1967, Israeli outposts have steadily expanded, with more than 500,000 settlers now living in the territory, which is also home to three million Palestinians.
A minority of settlers engage in violence toward the locals aimed at coercing them to leave, with the UN recording an unprecedented 260 attacks in October last year.
The threat of displacement has long hung over Jahaleen’s community, but the pressure has multiplied in recent months as about half of the hamlet’s 130 families decided to flee.
Among them, 20 families from the local Ka’abneh clan left last week, he said, while around another 50 families have been dismantling their homes.
’We can’t do anything’
The trailers of settlers dot the landscape around the village but are gradually being replaced by houses with permanent foundations, some built just 100 meters (300 feet) from Bedouin homes.
In May last year, settlers diverted water from the village’s most precious resource — the spring after which it is named.
Nestled between rocky hills to the west and the flat Jordan Valley that climbs up the Jordanian plateau to the east, the spring had allowed the community to remain self-sufficient.
But Bedouin families have been driven away by the constant need to stand guard to avoid settlers cutting the power supply and irrigation pipes, or bringing their herds to graze near Bedouin houses.
“If you defend your home, the (Israeli) police or army will come and arrest you. We can’t do anything,” lamented Naif Zayed, another local.
“There is no specific place for people to go; people are acting on their own, to each their own.”
Most Palestinian Bedouins are herders, which leaves them particularly exposed to violence when Israeli settlers bring their own herds that compete for grazing land in isolated rural areas.
It is a strategy that settlement watchdog organizations have called “pastoral colonialism.”
Israel’s military chief Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir said in November that he wanted to put a stop to the violence. This month the army announced new monitoring technology to enforce movement restrictions on both Israelis and Palestinians, with Israeli media reporting the move was largely aimed at reining in settler attacks.
Asked for comment, the Israeli military said: “Incidents in the Ras Al-Ain are well known. (Israeli military) forces enter the area in accordance with calls and operational needs, aiming to prevent friction between populations and to maintain order and security in the area.”
It said it had increased its presence in the area “due to the many recent friction incidents.”
’Bedouin way of life’
Naaman Ehrizat, another herder from Ras Ein Al-Auja, told AFP he had already moved his sheep to the southern West Bank city of Hebron ahead of his relocation.
But Jahaleen said moving to other rural parts of the territory risks exposing the herders to yet more displacement in the future.
He pointed to other families pushed out of the nearby village of Jiftlik, who were again displaced after moving to a village in the Jordan Valley.
Slogans spray-painted in Arabic have appeared along major roads in the West Bank in recent months that read: “No future in Palestine.”
For Jahaleen, whose family has lived in Ras Ein Al-Auja since 1991, the message sums up his feelings.
“The settlers completely destroyed the Bedouin way of life, obliterated the culture and identity, and used every method to change the Bedouin way of life in general, with the complete destruction of life,” he said.


Israeli repression, settlement expansion risk stoking West Bank violence: Experts

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Israeli repression, settlement expansion risk stoking West Bank violence: Experts

  • Ex-US envoy to Jordan: Despite Trump’s opposition, ‘de facto reality is one of annexation’

CHICAGO: Israel’s repression and its continued expansion of Jewish-only settlements are pushing Palestinians toward violence, Middle East experts said during a panel discussion attended by Arab News on Tuesday.

Hosted by the Middle East Institute, the panelists included Ron Shatzberg, co-executive director of the Economic Cooperation Foundation; Dr. Tahani Mustafa, visiting fellow in the Middle East and North Africa program at the European Council on Foreign Relations; and Yael Lempert, a former US ambassador to Jordan.

“From speaking with Palestinians, the hardship of what they’re going through, I see a potential escalation into violence in the West Bank,” Shatzberg said, adding that the goal of the settler movement and its supporters in Israel’s government is to achieve the collapse of the Palestinian Authority and block Palestinian statehood.

Violence in the West Bank would jeopardize the peace plan of US President Donald Trump, Shatzberg said, adding that accelerated settlement growth is a form of “de facto annexation.”

Mustafa said violence against Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank began long before the Hamas attack on Israel of Oct. 7, 2023.

“It was driving younger and younger generations of Palestinians that saw absolutely no political horizon toward more radical elements like Islamic Jihad and Hamas … In the last few months leading up to Oct. 7, the situation had been more tense than it had ever been in the decade that I’d worked on Palestine before that,” she added.

“Pre-Oct. 7, the levels of violence in the West Bank, land appropriation, Israeli search and arrest operations, settler violence, had been the worst they’d ever been in this conflict. The numbers of (Palestinian) fatalities were outnumbering anything we’d seen in the 15 years prior.” 

Lempert said there has been “tremendous frustration” from US administrations at the continued settlement expansion.

Despite Trump publicly declaring that “I will not allow Israel to annex the West Bank,” the “de facto reality is one of annexation, and no longer creeping annexation but sprinting annexation,” she added. “You see an acceleration that frankly is unrivaled since 1967.”

Shatzberg said Israel erected more than 30,000 new settler housing units just in 2025, fast outpacing the average of 4,000-5,000 each year.

He added that according to recent polling, 47 percent of Israelis oppose annexation while only 32 percent support it. The remainder, 21 percent, support a continuation of the status quo.