Israel orders removal of electricity network, destroys Palestinian houses in West Bank

The Israeli built controversial separation barrier is seen passing through fields near the Palestinian village of Beit Aawa, west the Israeli-occupied West Bank city of Hebron, Feb. 5, 2026. (AFP)
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Updated 10 February 2026
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Israel orders removal of electricity network, destroys Palestinian houses in West Bank

  • The notice demonstrates Israel’s continued efforts to tighten its control over the residents of Idhna, the mayor said
  • Israeli forces demolished two homes belonging to the Qabha family in the Khor Al-Dabaa neighborhood of Bartaa in Jenin

LONDON: Israeli authorities informed Palestinian residents of Idhna village, located west of Hebron, about a plan to remove the electricity network in the area as the Israeli government intends to strengthen control in the occupied West Bank.

Jaber Tmaizi, the mayor of Idhna, said that Israeli troops issued a notice demanding the removal of an electricity network that supplies Bir Al-Balouta area, located west of the town.

He added that this notice demonstrates Israel’s continued efforts to tighten its control over the residents of Idhna, aiming to displace them closer to the separation wall to expand the Adora settlement nearby.

On Tuesday, the Energy Minister Eli Cohen said that recent measures adopted by the government that deepen Israeli control in the occupied West Bank amounted to implementing “de facto sovereignty.”

Cohen said that steps “actually establish a fact on the ground that there will not be a Palestinian state.”

Palestinians, Arab countries, and human rights groups have described the moves announced on Sunday as an annexation of the territory, which is home to approximately 3.4 million Palestinians who aspire to use it for a future state.

On Tuesday, Israeli forces demolished two homes belonging to the Qabha family in the Khor Al-Dabaa neighborhood of Bartaa, which is located in Jenin in the northern West Bank. The demolition was carried out under the pretext that the houses were built without the necessary construction permits.

Earlier this year, Israeli forces also demolished four homes in Bartaa, again citing the absence of permits as the reason for the demolitions.


Iranian military helicopter crashes into fruit market, four dead

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Iranian military helicopter crashes into fruit market, four dead

  • The helicopter ​came ‌down ⁠in ​the city ⁠of Dorcheh, causing a fire that was put out by emergency services, the ⁠reports added
DUBAI: An Iranian Army helicopter crashed into a ​fruit market in the central province of Isfahan on Tuesday, killing the pilot, co-pilot and two ‌merchants, state media ‌reported.
The helicopter ​came ‌down ⁠in ​the city ⁠of Dorcheh, causing a fire that was put out by emergency services, the ⁠reports added.
Experts say ‌Iran ‌has a ​poor ‌air safety record, ‌with repeated crashes, many involving aircraft bought before the 1979 Islamic Revolution ‌and lacking original spare parts for maintenance.
Last ⁠week, ⁠a US-built F-4 fighter belonging to Iran’s regular air force crashed in the western province of Hamadan, killing one pilot during a ​training ​flight.