Settler violence displaces 15 Palestinian families near Jericho

A boy from the bedouin community of al-Auja looks at an empty sheepfold after sheep were reportedly stolen by Israeli settlers in an attack, west of Jericho in the Israel-occupied West Bank. (File / AFP)
Short Url
Updated 11 February 2026
Follow

Settler violence displaces 15 Palestinian families near Jericho

  • The families in the village of Deir Al-Dik left the As-Satih area after settlers began plowing and leveling the land surrounding their homes
  • The families belong to the Al-Ara’ra clan, one of the latest Bedouin communities that left their dwellings due to settlers’ violence

LONDON: Ongoing attacks by Israeli settlers on a Palestinian community west of Jericho in the central occupied West Bank forced 15 families to leave their homes on Wednesday.

The families in the village of Deir Al-Dik left the As-Satih area after settlers began plowing and leveling the land surrounding their homes, preventing them from using it, according to the Wafa news agency.

According to the Al-Baydar Organization for the Defense of Bedouin Rights, the 15 families belong to the Al-Ara’ra clan. The leveling operations have caused significant damage to agricultural lands.

The Al-Ara’ra clan is one of the latest Bedouin communities to leave their dwellings due to settler violence. In January, 20 families belonging to the Az-Zayed clan left their homes in the Shallal Al-Auja community north of Jericho after months of threats from settlers, denial of access to pastures, and vandalism of properties.

At least 694 Palestinians were forcefully driven from their homes in January, according to figures from the UN’s humanitarian agency OCHA.


Israeli fire kills priest in south Lebanon’s Qlayaa

Updated 4 sec ago
Follow

Israeli fire kills priest in south Lebanon’s Qlayaa

BEIRUT: A south Lebanon parish lost its priest on Monday when Father Pierre Al-Rai of Al-Qlayaa died of wounds sustained from Israeli tank fire, according to state media and a medical source.
The border village had not previously been caught up in the conflict between Hezbollah and Israel.
The National News Agency (NNA) reported that a house in the Christian town was “hit twice in succession by artillery shelling from a hostile Merkava tank” on Monday.
The first strike wounded the homeowner and his wife, according to NNA. After several neighbors, including Rai, and Red Cross paramedics rushed to the scene, the house was hit a second time, wounding Rai and three others.
The priest later died of his wounds, a medical source told AFP.
It was not clear why Israeli forces targeted the house, which is located on the outskirts of the town.
On Friday, Rai had taken part in a gathering organized by locals in the neighboring town of Marjayoun, where they said they were determined to remain in their homes despite evacuation warnings issued by the Israeli army to all residents south of the Litani river, about 30 kilometers from the border.
In a speech, Rai had said: “When we defend our land, we defend it peacefully, and we carry only the weapons of peace, goodness, love and prayer.”
“We are compelled to remain in danger because these are our homes and we will not leave them.”
Residents of Christian towns along or near the border are trying to stay out of the confrontation between Hezbollah and Israel.