17-02-2025
Palestinian displacement in the West Bank is highest since 1967, experts say
Many of the displaced are the descendants of refugees who were expelled or fled from their homes during the wars surrounding the creation of the state of Israel in 1948. The renewed displacement, even if temporary, raises painful memories of the central trauma in Palestinian history.
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While roughly 3,000 have returned home, most remain homeless after more than three weeks — a bigger displacement than during a similar Israeli campaign in the West Bank in 2002, according to two Palestinian and two Israeli experts on the history of the West Bank. That year, troops raided several cities at the height of a Palestinian uprising, known as the second intifada, which began with protests before leading to a surge in Palestinian attacks on civilians in Israel.
The current numbers also dwarf the displacement during intra-Palestinian clashes earlier this year, when up to 1,000 residents of Jenin left their homes, according to a residents' leadership council there.
As in 2002, some of those displaced during this new campaign will have no home to return to. The Israeli military has demolished scores of buildings in the areas it has invaded, ripping up roads, water pipes, and power lines to destroy what it says are booby traps set by militants.
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The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said water and sanitation systems had been destroyed in four dense urban neighborhoods, known as refugee camps because they house people displaced in 1948 and their descendants. It added that some water infrastructure had been contaminated with sewage.
'We've reached a point where the refugee camps are out of order,' said Hakeem Abu Safiye, who oversees emergency services in the Tulkarem camp. 'They are uninhabitable. Even if the army pulls out, we are not sure what will be left to repair.'
The full scale of the damage is unclear because the military is still operating in most of the areas it has invaded, but the United Nations has already recorded severe damage to more than 150 homes in Jenin. By early February, the Israeli military had acknowledged blowing up at least 23 buildings, but it has declined to confirm the latest number of demolished structures.
'The soldiers are taking over one area after another, destroying homes, infrastructure, and roads,' said Ramy Abu Siriye, 53, a barber forced to flee his home in Tulkarem on Jan. 27, the first day of the Israeli operation there.
A spokesperson for the Israeli military, Colonel Nadav Shoshani, said the military's goal was to root out militant groups, including Hamas, that launch terrorist attacks on Israeli civilians.
'The purpose of the operations is to prevent terror from places a few kilometers from Jewish communities and to prevent a repeat of Oct. 7,' Shoshani said, referring to the Hamas-led attack on Israel in October 2023 that killed up to 1,200 people and led to the abduction of some 250 people.
Shoshani acknowledged that in some cases people had been ordered to leave specific buildings close to what he said were militant hideouts. But more generally, Shoshani denied any wider policy of 'forced evacuation or displacement of Palestinians,' he said. 'If people want to move around, they are obviously allowed to.'
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But displaced Palestinians said that in both Jenin and Tulkarem they were instructed to leave by soldiers who used loudspeakers to make general evacuation orders.
'We had to leave the camp — the army threatened to shoot at us,' said Aws Khader, 29, a supermarket owner who fled Tulkarem on Jan. 27. 'They used megaphones, ordering people to leave or be shot.'
Asked for comment on this and similar incidents, the military repeated in a statement that no evacuation orders had been issued, but that all those who wished to leave had been provided with safe passage.
This article originally appeared in
.