Wednesday, July 30, 2025
3:59 AM
Doha,Qatar
KRISHNAN

Israel razes Palestinian buildings funded by EU

Israeli forces demolished 24 Palestinian buildings in a disputed military zone in the West Bank yesterday, including 10 funded by the European Union, leaving families homeless, authorities and residents said.
Soldiers destroyed the structures in and around the village of Khirbet Jenbah south of Hebron, the Association of Civil Rights in Israel said. Israeli officials said the buildings were illegal.
An EU spokesman denounced the demolitions and said that 10 of the buildings had been constructed with funds from ECHO, the European Commission’s humanitarian arm.
The soldiers arrived at around 7am and carried out the demolitions, leaving 12 families temporarily homeless, said Nidal Younes, head of the local council of a neighbouring village.
“In total it is around 80 people,” he said.
Israel has carried out a long campaign to relocate the residents of the area, which was declared a military zone by the Israeli government in the 1970s.
Human rights groups have repeatedly challenged Israel’s claim to the land, arguing it is illegal to establish a military zone in occupied territory, Sarit Michaeli from the B’Tselem NGO said.
The families argue that their ancestors, who were cave dwellers, have lived on the land since long before Israel occupied the West Bank in 1967.
A statement from COGAT, the Israeli defence ministry unit that administers civilian affairs in the West Bank, confirmed “enforcement measures were taken against illegal structures and solar panels built within a military zone.”
The EU called on Israel to change its policies in the occupied West Bank.
“The EU expects its investments in support of the Palestinian people to be protected from damage and destruction,” said a spokesman, who condemned the demolitions.
A High Court injunction later in the day ordered a halt to all demolitions until at least February 9.
The residents of the region had been undergoing a process of arbitration with Israeli authorities after a High Court ruling, Michaeli said.
However talks broke down in recent days.
“This basically means we are back to square one. The government wants to remove them. The residents object,” Michaeli said.
COGAT said the negotiations failed as “the building owners showed no willingness to get the situation in order and illegal construction did not stop”.
As such, “measures were taken in accordance with the law”, it said.
In total, more than 1,000 people could be affected, Michaeli explained, as there are around 10 other villages that could face similar action.
The villages are represented by a number of different legal teams, so yesterday’s demolitions concerned only one of the claims.

UN aid chief ‘alarmed’ by hunger-striker’s condition


A top UN official said yesterday he was “alarmed” by the condition of a Palestinian journalist on hunger strike over his detention without trial.
Robert Piper, UN co-ordinator for humanitarian assistance and development aid in the occupied Palestinian territories, raised concern for the fate of 33-year-old Mohamed al-Qiq, who the International Committee of the Red Cross say is in critical condition after 70 days refusing food.
“I am alarmed by the rapidly deteriorating health of Palestinian administrative detainee, Mohamed al-Qiq, who is on hunger strike in protest against the arbitrary nature of his detention and ill-treatment,” a statement from Piper said.
Qiq, a 33-year-old father of two and a correspondent for Saudi Arabia’s Almajd television network, was arrested on November 21 at his home in Ramallah.
He has been refusing food since November 25 in protest against his detention under Israel’s disputed administrative detention law—which allows the state to hold suspects for renewable six-month periods without trial.
Shin Bet, the Israeli domestic security service, says Qiq was arrested for “terror activity” as part of Hamas.
His family deny the claims and say he was only a journalist covering the West Bank.
Israel passed a controversial law in July last year allowing the force-feeding of prisoners in certain circumstances, but it remains unclear if it has been invoked.

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