
Palestinians in West Bank village face new crisis as Israeli settlers cut off water
Then settlers armed with knives set upon their water sources, villagers said.
'They want us to live without water, and here they also cut the electrical wires,' said Mousa Mughnem, 67, who lives with his 60-year-old wife Najah in the village near the town of Hebron.
Palestinians in the West Bank have reported growing Israeli settler violence since war erupted between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas in Gaza on October 7, 2023.
Palestinian authorities who exercise limited self-rule in parts of the West Bank say the settlers are trying to force Palestinians off their lands in order to seize them.
Emboldened by some far-right Israeli government ministers who seek to annex the West Bank, settlers have assaulted Palestinian farmers, cut down trees and set fire to precious olive groves.
Jihad Al-Nawajaa, the head of the Susiya village council, said the water shortages have become unbearable. 'If we do not have water here, we will not survive. They make us thirsty in order to expel us, and their aim is to expel people,' he said.
Residents of Susiya accuse Israeli settlers of severing water pipes and electricity wires, chopping down their olive trees and preventing them from herding their sheep.
In response to a Reuters request for a comment on settler attacks in Susiya, the Israeli military said soldiers have been dispatched to deal with any troubles and have removed Israeli citizens involved.
'As for the most recent incident that occurred on Monday (July 28), same protocol was used, and no injuries were reported,' the army said.
Olive trees part of Palestinian identity
Palestinians have cultivated olive trees for generations and regard them as an enduring symbol of their national identity.
Some villagers, like Najah Mughnem, are defiant and say they will remain attached to their land and their olives no matter what the settlers do.
'Even if they burn down or cut down the trees or inflict damage, we will not leave,' she said.
B'Tselem, an Israeli human rights organization, has reported around 54 settler attacks on the village since October 7, 2023, when Hamas-led militants attacked Israel from Gaza, killing 1,200 people and taking 251 hostages.
Israel's military response has killed more than 60,000 people in Gaza, according to the enclave's health authorities.
'We are afraid... We spend the days and nights nervous, we hardly sleep,' said Fawziyeh Al-Nawajaa, 58, a Susiya villager.
Susiya residents have faced threats of demolition for decades. Palestinians there were so attached to their lands that they once lived in caves until they were expelled in 1986 after an archaeological site was discovered.
The caves were later destroyed and they now live in tents and prefabricated buildings.
The village is spread across several rocky hillsides between a Jewish settlement to the south and a Jewish archaeological site to the north - land Israel has occupied since the 1967 Middle East war.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Arab News
an hour ago
- Arab News
Gaza Humanitarian Foundation to ‘scale up' number of sites from 4 to 16
LONDON: The US and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation will 'scale up' its sites in Gaza from four to 16, US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee has said. In an interview with Fox News, Huckabee said: 'The immediate plan is to scale up the number of sites up to 16 and begin to operate them as much as 24 hours a day.' The GHF was conceived by Israelis, is operated by American contractors on the ground, and receives diplomatic and financial support from the US, The New York Times reported. It currently operates four aid distribution sites, mostly in southern Gaza. Huckabee and Steve Witkoff, the US' special envoy to the Middle East, visited a GHF site in the enclave last week. Huckabee's comments are viewed as a response to mounting criticism of Israel's war and humanitarian strategy for Gaza. Aid groups have warned that the enclave is in the grip of a rapidly worsening hunger crisis, with Palestinians confronting famine levels of food insecurity. The World Food Programme, a UN body, has said that the humanitarian crisis in Gaza has reached 'new and astonishing levels of desperation, with one-third of the population not eating for multiple days in a row.' Observers widely viewed the launch of the GHF as an Israeli attempt to supersede Gaza's existing humanitarian network, which was largely run by the UN. The foundation has been severely criticized by the UN and has faced a boycott, after UN officials said its methods violated humanitarian law. Hundreds of Palestinians seeking food have been shot dead near GHF sites since the foundation began operations in May, health workers in the enclave have said. Israeli forces are stationed close to the sites, and the country's military said its troops had fired 'warning shots' toward crowds of desperate Palestinians. Huckabee said: 'The president has been telling us he wants food into the hands of hungry people, but he wants it in a way that it doesn't get into the hands of Hamas. That's exactly what we did when we stood up GHF.' He added that the foundation coordinated with the Israeli military but was not under its control, and that its results were 'pretty phenomenal.'


Saudi Gazette
2 hours ago
- Saudi Gazette
Hamdan Al-Turki returns to Saudi Arabia after 19 years in U.S. prisons
Saudi Gazette report RIYADH — Saudi national Hamdan Al-Turki has departed the United States and arrived in the Kingdom, nearly three months after his release from an American prison where he spent 19 years. Al-Turki was convicted in 2006 in Colorado on charges of unlawful imprisonment and abuse of his Indonesian housekeeper. The case drew significant international attention, with supporters citing claims of post-9/11 anti-Muslim bias in the U.S. legal system. He consistently denied all charges. On May 9, 2025, a Colorado court closed the case and cleared Al-Turki of his previous sentence during a session attended by his family and legal representatives from the Saudi Embassy in Washington. Following the decision, Al-Turki was transferred to an immigration detention facility pending repatriation procedures. His family had initially chosen to delay publicizing his return at the advice of attorneys, although U.S. media reports soon disclosed the his father's departure, Al-Turki's son, Turki, posted on X: 'Alhamdulillah for the completion of this blessing. Our father Hamdan Al-Turki is headed to the homeland. We thank God first, and then express our deepest gratitude to the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques and His Royal Highness the Crown Prince.'He also praised the role of the Saudi Embassy, which he said played a key part in securing his father's is a professor of linguistics at the time of his arrest, he was sentenced to 28 years in a maximum-security release this year at age 56 ends a nearly two-decade legal battle that sparked ongoing debate over legal fairness and civil rights.


Arab News
2 hours ago
- Arab News
Trump: Important that Middle Eastern countries join Abraham Accords
WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said on Thursday it was important that Middle Eastern countries join the Abraham Accords, which aim to normalize diplomatic ties with Israel, saying it will ensure peace in the region. 'Now that the nuclear arsenal being 'created' by Iran has been totally OBLITERATED, it is very important to me that all Middle Eastern Countries join the Abraham Accords,' Trump wrote in a social media post. As part of the Abraham Accords, signed during Trump's first term in office, four Muslim-majority countries agreed to normalize diplomatic relations with Israel after US mediation. Efforts to expand the accords have been complicated by a soaring death toll and starvation in Gaza. The war in Gaza, where local authorities say more than 60,000 people have died, has provoked global anger. Canada, France and the United Kingdom have announced plans in recent days to recognize an independent Palestinian state. Trump's administration is actively discussing with Azerbaijan the possibility of bringing that nation and some Central Asian allies into the Abraham Accords, hoping to deepen their existing ties with Israel, according to five sources with knowledge of the matter.