HUWARA, West Bank — Whenever Izz
Al-Deen Qisrawi, four, hears a noise outside his home, he runs to the TV to
check on the nine security cameras his parents installed, fearing an attack by
Jewish settlers.
اضافة اعلان
For two years, the Qisrawi family said,
settlers living on a nearby hillside have terrorized them, surrounding their
home, throwing rocks and firebombs, and trying to climb over the wall outside.
With each attack, this Palestinian family
in the Israeli-occupied West Bank town of Huwara fortified their home — adding
the cameras, metal barricades, and a higher wall — while putting off family
vacations and saving for their children’s college funds to pay for it all.
Firas Demaidi outside his
mother’s home in the West Bank village of Huwara, on March 15, 2023. The home
was set on fire by Jewish settlers.
“If you see the security, you wouldn’t
think this is a home. It feels like we’re living in a prison,” said Izz
Al-Deen’s mother, Leena Qisrawi, 38. “Every time they attack us from a new
angle, we put up new fortifications.”
Fiery rampageHuwara, a town of about 8,000 people, sits
on the only major road connecting the West Bank’s north and south and is
traversed regularly by both Palestinians and Israeli settlers. That has long
put it on the front line of Israel’s expanding settlements in the West Bank,
and it is a target of frequent attacks and harassment by settlers driving
through.
“If you see the security, you wouldn’t think this is a home. It feels like we’re living in a prison. Every time they attack us from a new angle, we put up new fortifications.”
But on February 26, the violence reached
new levels, traumatizing the residents of Huwara and leaving them fearful for
their safety, as attacks by settlers surge and Israel’s right-wing government
vows to assert greater control over the occupied West Bank.
That day, two settlers were shot and killed
by a suspected Palestinian gunman as they drove through Huwara, prompting a mob
of hundreds of Israelis from the hillside settlements to rampage through the
town and neighboring villages, throwing rocks and burning homes, businesses,
and vehicles. In the wake of the attack, in which a Palestinian man was killed,
the Israeli finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, a settler himself, called for
Huwara to be “erased” by the state.
Hundreds of Israeli soldiers are now
deployed on its streets, occasionally shutting roads and intersections, forcing
businesses along the main road to close, and seizing rooftops and entire buildings.
Weeks after the rampage, the town is still
making repairs, with burned-out vehicles parked in some lots and fire-damaged
buildings dotting the main road. The Israeli army, which said its forces were
there to de-escalate tension and prevent violence, would not specify how many
soldiers it had in Huwara.
‘Ghost town’Although Huwara is small, it has served as
an economic center for this part of the West Bank. People from surrounding
Palestinian villages and even Israelis from nearby settlements have come here
to shop in the businesses around town and bring their vehicles to be fixed in
the mechanic’s shops that line the main road.
Video from security cameras
on a screen in the home of the Qisrawi family in the West Bank village of
Huwara.
But now, with soldiers everywhere, rifles
at the ready, Palestinians have stopped coming, said Firas Demaidi, 36, who
owns a supermarket.
“The army has transformed it from a large
economic hub into a ghost town,” he said. “They’ve ruined us economically.”
“The army has transformed it from a large economic hub into a ghost town,” he said. “They’ve ruined us economically.”
In the past, many Palestinians in the area
relied on the land around Huwara for their livelihoods, growing crops like olives
and dates and foraging for wild vegetables. But after Israel occupied the West
Bank in 1967 and in the decades since, their farmland has become increasingly
off-limits as settlements in the area expand, cutting into and dividing West
Bank territory that residents hope will one day become a Palestinian state.
The settlementsOne of those growing settlements is
Yitzhar, a religious settlement built partly on privately owned Palestinian
land, which sits on the hills above Huwara and is now within walking distance
of the town. Some of the settlers there are followers of two extremist rabbis,
one of whom, Rabbi Yitzhak Shapira, published a book in 2009 offering religious
justification for killing non-Jews who pose a threat to Jews.
Residents of Huwara say that most of the
attackers on February 26 came from Yitzhar, whose expanding frontiers are
visible from the Qisrawi family’s balcony.
The two brothers and seminary students
whose killing sparked the rampage, Hillel and Yagel Yaniv, lived in Har Bracha,
a Jewish settlement in the hills above Nablus.
Escalation, war crimesViolence between settlers and Palestinians
in the occupied West Bank has surged this year.
From January 1 to March 13, the United Nations
recorded 219 settler-related attacks that led to four Palestinian deaths as
well as injuries or damage to Palestinian property, more than twice the number
in the same period last year. Israeli forces killed more than 70 Palestinians
in the West Bank over that period.
Attacks by Palestinians on settlers have
also more than doubled in that period, with 20 this year, resulting in the
deaths of 12 settlers and one foreigner, the United Nations said.
Palestinian men fix cars
that were set ablaze by Jewish settlers in the West Bank village of
Huwara.
The Israeli government has promised more
support for Jewish settlements in the West Bank, which most of the world
considers illegal under international law but which have steadily expanded over
the past 40 years. Smotrich, the finance minister who called for Huwara to be
erased, is among the leaders of the Israeli government who support ultimately
annexing all of the West Bank.
The International Criminal Court classifies
the act of an occupying power transferring its own population into occupied
land as a war crime. Palestinians say the repeated attacks by settlers are
aimed at driving them off their land.
In 2021, the number of Israeli settlers in
the West Bank was more than 465,000, according to Peace Now, an Israeli group
that monitors settlement activity. That compares with a little more than
200,000 in 2001.
Attacks by Israeli soldiers, policeHuwara residents say they are vulnerable to
more attacks because not many settlers were arrested after the attacks in
February and March, amid what Palestinians say is a general lack of
accountability.
From January 1 to March 13, the United Nations recorded 219 settler-related attacks that led to four Palestinian deaths as well as injuries or damage to Palestinian property, more than twice the number in the same period last year.
Nawal Demaidi, 70, lives in an apartment
above her son’s supermarket in Huwara. Security camera footage from the market
on February 26 shows settlers piling planks and plastic jugs against the front
door of the building and setting them on fire. Behind them, the blue-and-red
lights of an Israeli police vehicle can be seen, but authorities did not
intervene as the settlers fed the growing fire.
From a front balcony, her son pointed to
what he said was evidence that Israeli forces had helped the settlers: tear gas
canisters and stun grenades with Hebrew inscriptions.
Leena Qisrawi next to
windows in her family’s home in the West Bank village of Huwara, on March 15,
2023.
In the days after the attack, he filed a
complaint with the police. Nothing yet has come of it.
“The judge and executioner are one and the
same,” Demaidi said.
The Israeli army said that an inquiry into
the military’s response to the February 26 attacks concluded that there was an
insufficient number of soldiers in the area to prevent “violent riots”. It
added that it had learned lessons regarding dispatching reinforcements more
quickly “when there is suspicion of such a severe incident recurring”.
But residents said soldiers and border
police not only failed to intervene to help them, but when they threw rocks and
other projectiles in response to the settlers, the Israeli forces fired back at
the Palestinians with stun grenades, tear gas and, in some cases, live
ammunition.
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