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

Tag Results for "West Bank" (22 articles)

Gulf Times
Region

Foreign Ministers of Jordan and Turkiye Discuss Gaza, Syria updates over phone

Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi and his Turkish counterpart, Hakan Fidan, discussed a host of issues of mutual concern and developments in the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, and Syria.This came in a phone conversation on Wednesday, during which both sides stressed the importance of adhering to the Gaza ceasefire agreement and moving on to its second phase, in addition to the need to unite efforts to put an end to the dangerous Israeli escalation in the occupied West Bank.Both the ministers also reaffirmed their countries' continued cooperation and coordination to support Syria and its government's efforts in rebuilding the country and maintaining its security, stability, sovereignty, and territorial integrity, along with the safety of its citizens.

Gulf Times
Region

11 Students injured as Israeli Occupation forces raid Birzeit University

Eleven students were injured after Israeli occupation forces entered the campus of Birzeit University in the occupied West Bank, Palestinian officials said.The Palestinian Red Crescent said five students were wounded by live fire, four suffered tear gas inhalation and two were injured in falls. All were taken to hospital.University officials said troops broke through the main gate and fired live rounds, tear gas and stun grenades while thousands of students were on campus. They added that buildings were entered, and student equipment seized, and that the university's vice-president for academic affairs was briefly detained.The Palestinian Ministry of Education condemned the raid, calling it a violation of international conventions protecting educational institutions. The incident comes amid heightened Israeli military activity across the West Bank.

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 arrests four Palestinians in Tulkarm, Bethlehem

The Israeli occupation forces (IOF) arrested on Wednesday four Palestinian civilians after having raided the governorates of Tulkarm and Bethlehem across the occupied West Bank.WAFA news agency reported that the IOF arrested three young Palestinians in Kafr Al-Labad town, east of Tulkarm governorate, after having raided their homes.In Bethlehem Governorate, the IOF arrested a Palestinian in Beit Fajjar town, deployed in several neighborhoods, and raided several other homes.These arrests come as part of the daily raids carried out by the IOF across the West Bank, during which Palestinians are repeatedly arrested, and their homes are raided.

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.

A Palestinian woman, Etaf Jaradat from Silat al-Harithiya, watches from a hill as Israeli bulldozers work in her land to reportedly make way for the construction of settlements in the Sarouj area, located between the towns of Silat al-Harithiya and Yamoun, west of Jenin in the occupied West Bank, Monday.
Region

League slams Israeli decision on new West Bank settlements

The Arab League has called out the decision taken by the Security Cabinet of the Israeli occupation state to endorse the establishment of 19 new settlements in the occupied West Bank. In a statement Monday, the Arab League stressed that this move lays bare a brazen challenge to the international will that opposes the settlement and constitutes a breach of international law, confirming the illegitimacy of these settlements. The apparent expansion of this unlawful settlement is carried out with the intent of preventing the establishment of a continuous Palestinian state geographically, reflecting the nature of the Israeli government controlled by extremists and settlers, the statement concluded. The statement further emphasised that this expansion will never make settlements legitimate whatsoever, and that the violence unleashed by extremist settlers against Palestinians in the West Bank is a kind of terror practised under the eyes of the occupation state and protected by its official apparatus. 

A barber tends to a client in the old city of Nablus in the occupied West Bank. – AFP
Region

Israel approves 19 new settlements in West Bank

Israel has approved the establishment of 19 new settlements in the occupied West Bank, a move the far-right finance minister said was aimed at preventing the establishment of a Palestinian state.The decision taken by the security cabinet brings the total number of settlements approved over the past three years to 69, according to a statement from the office of Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich.The latest approvals come days after the United Nations said the expansion of Israeli settlements in the West Bank – all of which are illegal under international law – had reached its highest level since at least 2017."The proposal by Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and Defence Minister Israel Katz to declare and formalise 19 new settlements in Judea and Samaria has been approved by the cabinet," the statement said, using the Israeli biblical term for the West Bank, without specifying when the decision was made.The final approval came from the security cabinet, which is part of the overall right-wing government.Smotrich is a vocal proponent of settlement expansion and a settler himself."We will continue to develop, build and settle the land of our ancestral heritage, with faith in the justice of our path,” he said in the statement.UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres recently condemned what he described as Israel's "relentless" expansion of settlements in the occupied territory.It "continues to fuel tensions, impede access by Palestinians to their land and threaten the viability of a fully independent, democratic, contiguous and sovereign Palestinian State", he said earlier this month.Since the start of the war in Gaza, calls for the establishment of a Palestinian state have proliferated, with several European countries, Canada and Australia recently moving to formally recognise such a state, drawing rebukes from Israel.A UN report said the expansion of settlements was at its highest point since 2017, when the United Nations began tracking such data."These figures represent a sharp increase compared to previous years," Guterres said, noting an average of 12,815 housing units were added annually between 2017 and 2022."These developments are further entrenching the unlawful Israeli occupation and violating international law and undermining the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination,” he said.Excluding east Jerusalem, which was occupied and annexed by Israel in 1967, more than 500,000 Israelis live in the West Bank, along with about 3mn Palestinian residents.Smotrich's office said the 19 newly approved settlements are located in what it described as "highly strategic" areas, adding that two of them – Ganim and Kadim in the northern West Bank – would be re-established after being dismantled two decades ago.Five of the 19 settlements already existed but had not previously been granted legal status under Israeli law, the statement said.While all Israeli settlements in the Palestinian territory are illegal under international law, some wildcat outposts are also illegal under Israeli law.Many of these, however, are later legalised by Israeli authorities, fuelling fears about the possible annexation of the territory.US President Donald Trump has warned Israel against annexing the West Bank."Israel would lose all of its support from the United States if that happened," Trump said in a recent interview with *Time magazine.Israel has occupied the West Bank since 1967, where violence has surged since the Gaza war erupted in October 2023.Israeli troops or settlers have killed at least 1,027 Palestinians in the West Bank – both militants and civilians – since the start of the fighting in Gaza, according to an AFP tally based on Palestinian health ministry figures.At least 44 Israelis have been killed in the West Bank in Palestinian attacks or Israeli military operations during the same period, according to Israeli data. 

Gulf Times
Qatar

Qatar condemns Israeli occupation government's approval of 19 new settlements in West Bank

The State of Qatar condemned the Israeli occupation government's approval of the establishment of 19 settlements in the West Bank, considering it a flagrant violation of international legitimacy resolutions, particularly UN Security Council Resolution 2334, and a blatant assault on the rights of the Palestinian people.In a statement on Tuesday, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs stressed the importance of the international community fulfilling its legal and moral responsibilities by compelling Israel to halt its settlement policy in the occupied Palestinian territories.The Ministry reaffirmed the State of Qatar's firm and unwavering position in supporting the Palestinian cause and the steadfastness of the Palestinian people, based on international legitimacy resolutions and the two-state solution, in a manner that ensures the establishment of an independent Palestinian state on the 1967 borders, with East Jerusalem as its capital.

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. 

Gulf Times
Region

Israeli occupation arrests 11 Palestinians in West Bank

This morning, Israeli occupation forces arrested 11 Palestinians from various areas of the West Bank amid an ongoing escalation of violence against Palestinians. The Palestinian News Agency (WAFA) reported that the occupation forces arrested four people from the Nablus governorate after raiding the Balata, Askar Al Qadim, Askar Al Jadid camps and the town of Beit Furik, in addition to two citizens from the town of Beit Rima and the village of Abu Shkheidem northwest of Ramallah, and six others from the city of Qalqilya.

Gulf Times
Region

Israeli occupation arrests 25 Palestinians in West Bank

The Israeli occupation forces (IOF) launched widespread arrests, raids and violent house searches on Thursday in the West Bank, arresting 25 Palestinians.Palestinian news agency (WAFA) reported that the IOF arrested 18 Palestinians in the city of Dura during their raid on southern Al-Khalil, four others in the villages of Beita and Qaryout, south of Nablus, and three young Palestinians in the town of Deir Al-Ghusun, north of Tulkarm.In the same context, the IOF demolished a park in the town of Al-Qubayba, northwest of Occupied Jerusalem (Al-Quds).These arrests come as part of the escalating policy pursued by the Israeli occupation in the West Bank, which aims to terrify Palestinians, restrict their movement, and persecute activists and released prisoners.

Gulf Times
International

UN report reveals rising unemployment and deepening poverty in Palestine

The International Labour Organization (ILO) announced that the unemployment rate in the West Bank during the first quarter of 2025 reached 31.7% for men and 33.7% for women. In a report analyzing the impact of the two-year Israeli occupation's aggression on Gaza on the West Bank economy and labor market, the ILO noted a sharp deterioration in livelihoods, with rising unemployment rates, declining incomes, and worsening poverty among Palestinians in the occupied Palestinian territories.The report indicated that the war and its accompanying restrictions caused a 29% decline in the gross domestic product (GDP) in the occupied Palestinian territory as a whole between the first two quarters of 2023 and 2025, with the West Bank recording a 17.1% contraction.It revealed that the situation worsened during the second quarter of this 2025, with Israeli restrictions tightened across the West Bank. Living standards declined, with real per capita income in the West Bank declining by more than 20% compared to 2023.The ILO predicted a further deterioration in the labor market in the West Bank, with the overall unemployment rate expected to reach 38.5%, affecting more than 363,000 Palestinians. It added that the West Bank recorded modest growth of 9.9% in the first quarter of 2025 compared to the same period in 2024, but output remains well below pre-war levels.