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Monday, January 19, 2026 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Tag Results for "Palestinians" (61 articles)

Gulf Times
Region

Egyptian President, EU Foreign Policy Chief highlight need to fully implement Gaza ceasefire deal

Egyptian President, Abdel Fattah El Sisi and European Union (EU) High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Kaja Kallas, who is visiting Egypt, reiterated the need to implement the Gaza ceasefire agreement fully and ensure the regular and unrestricted flow of humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip. Both sides stressed their absolute rejection of any attempts to displace Palestinians from their land and the need to begin implementing the second phase of the Gaza ceasefire deal and the reconstruction of the strip. They also reaffirmed the importance of resuming the political process to achieve a comprehensive, just, and lasting peace in accordance with the two-state solution. El Sisi and Kallas discussed ways to advance cooperation in combating terrorism and organized crime, in addition to addressing irregular migration.

Gulf Times
Region

Palestinian report: Over 23,000 Israeli assaults on Palestinians in 2025

Israeli occupation forces and settlers conducted 23,827 assaults on the Palestinians and their property in various governorates across the occupied West Bank and Jerusalem in 2025, a record upsurge in the number of assaults recorded in one year, the Palestinian Colonization and Wall Resistance Commission said in a report Monday.The report added that these attacks were distributed between 1,382 in the land and crops sector, 16,664 in the individuals sector, and 5,398 in the properties sector, with the occupation army carrying out 18,384 assaults, while the settlers carried out 4,723, and both parties together executed 720.The year 2025 had been heavily blood-soaked with maps and decisions as the occupation state didn't stop at expanding settlement, but sought to expand the true meaning of control per se, as domination hadn't been limited to land as a space, but went further to redefine geography, symbol, and the entire Palestinian existence, the Commission noted.The report added that the settler assaults have resulted in the slaying of 14 Palestinians since the beginning of the year, which explicitly caused 434 arson incidents against the property and gardens of the Palestinians.The occupation army and settlers conducted 892 assaults that were marked by uprooting, damaging, and poisoning as many as 35,273 trees, of them 26,988 olive trees, the report continued.It clarified that settler terrorism led to the displacement of 13 Palestinian Bedouin communities since the beginning of last year, consisting of 197 families including 1,090 individuals, from their places of residence to other locations.The occupation authorities carried out a total of 538 razings, resulting in the destruction of 1,400 facilities in an unprecedented upsurge, including 304 inhabited houses, 74 uninhabited houses, as well as 270 livelihood sources and 490 agricultural facilities, the report concluded, noting that the number of notifications delivered to Palestinians rose to 991.Regarding settlement expansion, the report noted that the occupation authorities last year seized an area of 5,572 dunums through 94 seizure orders for military purposes, 24 of which triggered the establishment of buffer zones around the settlements.The statistics showed that since the beginning of 2025, the occupation authorities' planning committees studied a total of 265 master plans for the construction of 34,979 settlement units on an area of 33,448 dunums.The report outlined that 2025 marked an advanced stage in leveraging legal systems as a central tool to deepen the colonial scheme, with the Israeli occupation's Knesset laying out a record number of draft legislation and legislative amendments.These moves, the report says, were explicitly intended to legitimize the colonial status quo, broaden the powers of settlers and their local councils, as well as consolidate the legal discrimination in managing lands, planning, and construction.This draft legislation included settling colonial outposts that had been enacted without previous government decisions, in addition to reinforcing the Israeli control over the West Bank territories through transferring additional civil discretion to the occupation's institutions, the report highlighted.It stressed that the objective was to blunt the legal status of the Palestinian lands and their owners, such as the law to enable settlers to acquire land and property and to alter the names of Palestinian land to obsolete biblical names.Head of the Wall and Settlement Resistance Commission, Mu'ayyad Shaaban, stressed that the current period requires an urgent national transition from risk description to building a comprehensive response to protect the Palestinian territory.This response, he noted, should be based on outright distribution of roles and integrated efforts between official institutions and the political and societal forces to restore the land's status as the essence of the conflict.As such, Shaaban called for upgrading the popular resistance tools to ensure their continuity and effectiveness and be converted from seasonal and symbolic action into meaningful and organized ones.Shaaban emphasized the importance of building a national political and media rhetoric that redefines what is transpiring as a pure settlement colonization to replace the Palestinian territory.He concluded that all these measures fall under a consensus national vision to protect the Palestinian geography where the supreme national interest takes hold.

Gulf Times
Region

Israeli Occupation demolishes residential apartment, arrests four Palestinians in Nablus

The Israeli occupation forces (OIF) bombed at dawn on Thursday a residential apartment in the city of Nablus in the occupied West Bank, and arrested four Palestinians.WAFA news agency reported that the IOF stormed Nablus and surrounded the apartment before bombing it, adding that the IOF also arrested two of its residents during the operation.The IOF also stormed the Old City in Nablus and arrested two more young Palestinians after having raided their homes.This attack comes as part of a series of arbitrary practices carried out by the Israeli occupation in various areas of the occupied West Bank, which often include house raids, mass arrests, and the use of live ammunition.

Gulf Times
Region

Israeli Occupation arrests 50 Palestinians in West Bank, Jerusalem

The Israeli occupation forces arrested 50 Palestinians, most of them former prisoners, during a large-scale campaign of arrests and field investigations in the occupied West Bank and Jerusalem.In a statement on Thursday, the Palestinian Prisoners Club said that the arrest campaign has continued since dawn today, with arrests and field investigations concentrated in the Ramallah, while the rest of the arrests were distributed across Hebron, Tubas, Tulkarm, Nablus, Jenin, and Jerusalem.The club added that the arrests were accompanied by widespread raids and abuse, attacks against the detainees and their families, as well as widespread acts of sabotage and destruction in the homes of Palestinians.The club pointed out that the occupation has adopted a number of policies in the various areas it raids, and the key to these policies is the systematic field investigation that has affected dozens of families in all governorates.The number of arrests during 2025 reached more than 7,000 in the West Bank, including Jerusalem, in addition to the field investigations that affected thousands, while about 21,000 arrests were recorded since Oct. 7, 2023, without including arrests from Gaza, which are estimated to be in the thousands.

A Palestinian woman cooks, with the rubble of residential buildings destroyed during the war visible in the background, in Jabalia, northern Gaza Strip, Wednesday.
Region

Hoping for better year ahead, Gazans bid farewell to 2025

As 2025 draws to a close, Palestinians in Gaza are marking the new year not with celebration, but with exhaustion, grief and a fragile hope that their "endless nightmare" might finally end.For residents of the battered territory, daily life is a struggle for survival.Much of Gaza's infrastructure lies in ruins, electricity remains scarce and hundreds of thousands of people live in makeshift tents."We in the Gaza Strip are living in an endless nightmare," said Hanaa Abu Amra, a displaced woman in her thirties living in Gaza City."We hope that this nightmare will end in 2026...The least we can ask for is a normal life-- to see electricity restored, the streets return to normal and to walk without tents lining the roads," she said.Across Gaza, a territory of more than 2mn people, scenes of hardship are commonplace.Children queue with plastic containers to collect water, while rows of tents stretch across streets and open spaces, sheltering families who have lost their homes.What were once bustling neighbourhoods now bear the scars of bombardment, with daily activity reduced to the bare essentials.For many, the end of the year is a moment to mourn as much as to hope.In Gaza City, a teenager painted "2026" on his tent, while an AFP journalist observed a local artist sculpting the same in sand in Deir el-Balah, in central Gaza.The outgoing year brought relentless loss and fear, said Shireen Al-Kayali."We bid farewell to 2025 with deep sorrow and grief," she said."We lost a lot of people and our possessions. We lived a difficult and harsh life, displaced from one city to another, under bombardment and in terror."Her experience reflects that of countless Gazans who have been forced to flee repeatedly, often with little warning, taking with them only what they could carry.Entire families have been uprooted, livelihoods destroyed, and communities fragmented as the war dragged on for two years.Despite the devastation, some residents cling to the belief that the new year might bring an end to the fighting and a chance to rebuild.For many Gazans, hope has become an act of resilience, particularly after the truce that came into effect on October 10 and has largely halted the fighting."We still hope for a better life in the new year, and I call on the free world to help our oppressed people so we can regain our lives," said Khaled Abdel Majid, 50, who lives in a tent in Jabalia camp.Faten al-Hindawi hoped the truce would finally end the war."We will bid farewell to 2025, leaving behind its pain, and we hope that 2026 will be a year of hope, prayer, determination and success stories."Such hopes are shared widely across Gaza, even as conditions on the ground remain dire.Humanitarian agencies have warned that shortages of food, clean water and medical supplies persist, while winter conditions are worsening life in overcrowded displacement camps.Amid the rubble and the tents, many Gazans say their aspirations are modest: safety, stability and dignity."I hope the reconstruction of Gaza begins in 2026. Gaza was beautiful, and we hope it returns to being beautiful again." 

Gulf Times
Region

Israeli Occupation forces detain four Palestinians in West Bank

Israeli occupation forces on Saturday evening detained four Palestinians, including two women, from the Al Maleh area in the northern Jordan Valley, northeast of the occupied West Bank.Local sources said Israeli forces raided the area following an earlier settler attack on local residents and detained four members of one family, including two women.Earlier in the day, a group of Israeli settlers assaulted the family, while Israeli forces accompanying the settlers prevented an ambulance from reaching a child who had been injured after being beaten during the attack.

Bassam Omar Shaheen, 37, stands outside his home in Gaza City's Al-Saftawi neighbourhood in the northern Gaza Strip. Omar was injured in an attack on a school on November 3, 2023 in the neighbourhood in the northern Gaza Strip, in which his father and mother were killed, and his leg was amputated as a result. He has been waiting for two years to travel to complete treatment for his hand, which requires surgery due to damage to his fingers and palm.
Region

Rights group warns on worsening health of Palestinian prisoners in custody

The health situation of the Palestinians languishing in the Israeli occupation's custody is deteriorating due to persistent medical negligence, severe shortages of medicines, and lack of medical follow-up, the Commission of Detainees and Ex-Detainees Affairs in Palestine reported in a statement Wednesday. The statement further explained that this situation has engendered numerous morbidities among the prisoners, with the commission's legal crew documenting an extremely complex humanitarian situation engulfing them in various Israeli dungeons. Following field visits to these prisons, the statement highlighted that the situation reflected a harsh, dehumanised environment at the detention and interrogation sites, with repeated complaints reported about daily repression and intimidation, marked by dehumanised inspections and collective punishment, the statement warned.**media[397273]**After the crew huddled with those prisoners, they complained about severe shortages of blankets and clothing, as well as being constantly bereft of familial visits and subjected to sudden relocation between sections and prisons in a repeated manner, which is manipulated as a vehicle for psychological and physical pressure. The Palestinian Prisoners' Media Office reported that the Israeli occupation has ramped up repression measures during December, with prison units conducting cascading campaigns throughout the month, marked by beatings and collective dehumanisation against the prisoners. The office further noted heightened and harsh solitary confinements amid extreme cold and deprivation of basic life necessities, holding the Israeli occupation fully responsible for the safety of those prisoners, as well as the consequences of the policy of isolation and repression. It called for international and human rights organizations to spring into action to halt the crimes inside the prisons. 

Gulf Times
Region

Israeli forces raid towns in West Bank, arrest 6 Palestinians

Israeli occupation forces arrested six Palestinians on Tuesday after raiding the town of Birzeit, north of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank.Palestinian news agency (WAFA) reported that the occupation forces stormed the town at dawn, raided several homes, and vandalized their contents. They also stormed Birzeit University from three entrances, detaining several security guards and confiscating their phones.The occupation forces also raided several towns in the Jenin governorate, carrying out extensive search and arrest operations.Local sources said that the occupation forces stormed the town of Ya'bad, deployed infantry units in its center, and raided and searched a number of homes. They also stormed the town of Silat al-Harithiya, west of Jenin, and raided and searched homes there, though no arrests were reported.In Qabatiya, Israeli military vehicles stormed the town and deployed throughout its streets, raiding residents' homes. Israeli soldiers also positioned snipers on the rooftops of several houses, though no clashes or arrests were reported.Cities, towns, and refugee camps in the occupied West Bank and Jerusalem witness daily raids and incursions by Israeli occupation forces, accompanied by clashes, arrests, and the firing of live ammunition, rubber-coated bullets, and tear gas at Palestinian youth. 

An injured Palestinian receives treatment following an Israeli air strike, at Al-Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza City, yesterday.
Region

Israeli airstrikes kill 25 Palestinians in Gaza

At least 25 Palestinians were killed in four Israeli airstrikes Wednesday in a part of Gaza under Hamas control since a shaky ceasefire took effect in October, health authorities said. Medics said 10 people were killed in the Gaza City suburb of Zeitoun, two in Shejaia suburb to the east and the rest in two separate attacks in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip.**media[383862]**The Israeli military said its forces struck Hamas targets across Gaza after members of the Palestinian fighters fired on its troops in violation of the nearly six-week-old ceasefire. No Israeli forces were injured. Repeated shooting incidents have pointed to the fragility of the ceasefire.Israel and Hamas have traded blame for what both call violations of the US-brokered truce, the first stage of President Donald Trump's 20-point plan for a post-war Gaza. All three attacks were far beyond an agreed-upon imaginary "yellow line" separating the areas under Israeli and Palestinian control, according to medics, witnesses and Palestinian media.**media[383863]**The Zeitoun attack was on a building belonging to Muslim religious authorities and the Khan Younis attack was on a UN-run club, both of which house displaced families. The October 10 ceasefire in the two-year Gaza war has eased the conflict, enabling hundreds of thousands of Palestinians to return to Gaza’s ruins.Israel has pulled troops back from city positions, and aid flows have increased. But violence has not completely halted. Palestinian health authorities say Israeli forces have killed 305 people in strikes on Gaza since the truce, nearly half of them in one day last week when Israel retaliated for an attack on its troops. Israel says three of its soldiers have been killed since the ceasefire began.

Israeli settler caravans, part of a new outpost, are seen close to the Palestinian Umm al-Kheir village, located near the settlement of Karmel, south of Yatta village some 15 kilometers south of the occupied West Bank city of Hebron, Sunday.
Region

Surge in settler attacks linked to plan for West Bank annexation

The perilous escalation of settler attacks against Palestinians in the West Bank, which intensified during the olive harvest season, is occurring without any deterrence or accountability, and often under the direct protection of the Israeli army, Euro‑Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor (Euro-Med Monitor) said in a statement Sunday.The statement further indicated that this forms part of a deliberate and systematic policy that uses settler violence to reinforce Israeli control, alongside rapid settlement expansion and land expropriation to impose de facto annexation and displace Palestinian residents.The systematic escalation forms part of a broader effort to consolidate Israeli control over the West Bank by depopulating it and expanding the territorial and operational influence of settlements, the statement continued.It added that this includes turning settlers into practical extensions of the army in attacks and land seizure operations, while imposing new patterns of field control that entrench separation and isolation between Palestinian communities, undermining any possibility of establishing a contiguous or independent Palestinian entity.Euro-Med Monitor's field team has documented a marked increase in settler attacks against Palestinians in recent weeks, particularly farmers. These attacks have included physical assault, theft of olive harvests, burning of trees, destruction of property, and preventing access to agricultural land, the statement read.The statement further stressed that dozens of incidents took place under the direct protection of Israeli forces, with soldiers participating in some of them, clearly indicating an integrated system aimed at persecuting and displacing Palestinians.In addition, Euro-Med Monitor documented 324 settler attacks over 39 days, from the beginning of October until the evening of November 8, averaging eight attacks per day. Settler violence during the current olive harvest season is the highest in years, with approximately 163 incidents resulting in injuries to more than 143 Palestinians and the destruction of over 4,200 trees and saplings across 77 West Bank villages, the statement added.It further noted that the attacks carried out by organised, militia-like armed settlers who launch from settlements and illegal outposts throughout the West Bank have become a systematic practice of armed violence against Palestinian civilians.

Gulf Times
Region

Two Palestinians killed, one wounded by Israeli fire in various areas of Gaza

Two Palestinians were killed, and a third wounded by Israeli occupation forces in various areas of the Gaza Strip. Palestinian news agency (WAFA) reported that Al-Awda Hospital in Nuseirat had received the body of a martyr recovered by civilians from the city of Al-Zahra. The hospital also received a wounded person injured by Israeli fire east of Al-Bureij refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip. In the same context, another person died from wounds sustained yesterday when he was shot by Israeli forces in the Shuja'iyya neighborhood east of Gaza City, according to medical sources. The Israeli occupation continues to violate the ceasefire agreement in the Gaza Strip, which came into effect on October 10. Last Tuesday and Wednesday, it carried out intensive airstrikes and shelling targeting Palestinian homes and tents in various parts of the Strip, resulting in the deaths of more than 100 Palestinians, including more than 46 children and 20 women.

An employee of the Nasser Medical Complex rests near a body bag containing one of the thirty bodies of Palestinian prisoners detained by Israel and released as part of the hostage exchange deal, as they arrive in Khan Yunis, in the southern Gaza Strip, on Friday. AFP
Region

Israel returns 30 bodies of Gaza martyrs

Nasser Medical Hospital in the Gaza Strip received Friday the bodies of 30 martyrs released by Israeli occupation forces.According to local sources, cited by the Palestinian News Agency (WAFA), the bodies were transferred to the hospital via the International Committee of the Red Cross.This marks the fifth batch of martyrs' bodies handed over by the Israeli occupation since the ceasefire agreement in Gaza took effect.Most of the bodies bore signs of torture, burning, and execution. Many were found with bound hands and blindfolded eyes, their features severely disfigured, making identification by families nearly impossible.The handover is part of a prisoner and detainee exchange deal under the ceasefire agreement between Hamas and the Israeli entity, which came into force on Oct 10.Under the truce, Israel is to return the remains of 15 Palestinians for every deceased Israeli hostage returned by Hamas. Friday's transfer brings the number returned to Gaza to 225. Hamas has already returned 20 surviving hostages.Hamas insists it is committed to the ceasefire plan but is struggling to find the remaining dead because two years of Israeli bombardments have erased Gazan landmarks.Egyptian recovery teams equipped with earth-moving equipment have joined the effort to search for the bodies.