Israel Incites against Negev Bedouins' Birthrate

Israeli policemen stand guard as bulldozers demolish homes in the Bedouin village of Um al-Hiran. (AFP)
Israeli policemen stand guard as bulldozers demolish homes in the Bedouin village of Um al-Hiran. (AFP)
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Israel Incites against Negev Bedouins' Birthrate

Israeli policemen stand guard as bulldozers demolish homes in the Bedouin village of Um al-Hiran. (AFP)
Israeli policemen stand guard as bulldozers demolish homes in the Bedouin village of Um al-Hiran. (AFP)

Far-right Israeli MP and former Transportation Minister Bezalel Smotrich criticized on Saturday the high birthrate among the Bedouin community in the Negev region, describing it as a “demographic time bomb”.

In remarks seen as direct incitement against the community, he claimed that the birthrate is a ticking time bomb that must be defused before it blows up.

The community boasts some 200,000 people, and “they are doubling every 12 years,” he added.

Israel must take action to curb this trend, he suggested.

“The more Western you make them, the more the birthrate will come down,” alleged Smotrich, saying he was keen on preserving the Jewish majority not just for the sake of Israel, but the Negev.

He added that Israel should not intervene to alter the birthrate, because change will come on its own if the Bedouins join cities and become part of organized societies and if they become better educated and obtain jobs.

Smotrich’s remarks prompted a response from Arab MP Ahmed al-Tibi, who tweeted in German that the former minister had just months ago described settlers who carry bombs as children and the Bedouin children as a demographic time bomb.

He slammed such racist remarks a week after Israeli forces killed Palestinian Iyad al-Hallak in Jerusalem, “for no other crime than being a Palestinian Arab.”

Israel is seeking to impose its control over the Negev and expel its Bedouin residents. Last year, the government proposed a plan to relocate some 36,000 Arab Bedouins to villages and towns that are not recognized by Israeli authorities.

The Bedouins vehemently rejected the plan, but that has not deterred Israel, which is seeking to claim their 260,000 dunams of land.



100 Million Captagon Pills Destroyed in Damascus

Members of the security forces with Syria's new government inspect a warehouse that used to hide pills of Captagon, a brand name of the psychostimulant drug Fenethylline, inside children's toys, hookahs, house doors and plastic insulation, during a raid in Latakia on January 19, 2025. (Photo by AAREF WATAD / AFP)
Members of the security forces with Syria's new government inspect a warehouse that used to hide pills of Captagon, a brand name of the psychostimulant drug Fenethylline, inside children's toys, hookahs, house doors and plastic insulation, during a raid in Latakia on January 19, 2025. (Photo by AAREF WATAD / AFP)
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100 Million Captagon Pills Destroyed in Damascus

Members of the security forces with Syria's new government inspect a warehouse that used to hide pills of Captagon, a brand name of the psychostimulant drug Fenethylline, inside children's toys, hookahs, house doors and plastic insulation, during a raid in Latakia on January 19, 2025. (Photo by AAREF WATAD / AFP)
Members of the security forces with Syria's new government inspect a warehouse that used to hide pills of Captagon, a brand name of the psychostimulant drug Fenethylline, inside children's toys, hookahs, house doors and plastic insulation, during a raid in Latakia on January 19, 2025. (Photo by AAREF WATAD / AFP)

Syrian security forces destroyed seized drugs Sunday including around 100 million pills of the amphetamine-like stimulant captagon -- whose production and trafficking flourished under ousted president Bashar al-Assad, an official told AFP.

“We destroyed large quantities of narcotic pills,” said official Badr Youssef, including “about 100 million captagon pills and 10 to 15 tons of hashish” as well as raw materials used to produce captagon.

He spoke from the Damascus headquarters of the defunct Fourth Division where the drugs were seized. The Fourth Division was controlled by Assad's brother, Maher.

Earlier, the official SANA news agency said: “the anti-narcotics department of the (interior) ministry is destroying narcotic substances seized at the headquarters of the Fourth Division.”

An AFP photographer saw security personnel in a Fourth Division warehouse load dozens of bags filled with pills and other drugs into trucks, before taking them to a field to be burned.

Over the past decade, the regime of Assad, ousted last month by opposition factions, has been accused of being the principal purveyor of Captagon, which flooded markets across the Middle East.

Revenues from Captagon sales sustained the old regime for much of the 13-year conflict. A 2022 AFP investigation found that Syria under Assad had become a narco state, with the $10-billion captagon industry dwarfing all other exports.

On Saturday, SANA reported that authorities had seized “a huge warehouse belonging to the former regime” in the coastal city of Latakia.

It said the factory “specialized in packing captagon pills into children's toys and furniture.”

On Sunday, an AFP photographer visited the warehouse near the port and saw security personnel dismantling children's bicycles that contained the small white pills.

Captagon pills had also been hidden inside objects such as doors, shisha water pipes and car parts, he reported.

Abu Rayyan, a security official in Latakia, said that “about 50 to 60 million captagon pills” had been seized that “belonged to the Fourth Division.”

“This is the largest such warehouse in the area,” he said.

Abu Rayyan said the drugs had been packed for export from Latakia “to neighboring countries,” and that they would be destroyed.