PA Accuses Settlers of Escalating Attacks During Olive Harvest Season

Roads leading to olive tree lands blocked near Ramallah to prevent Palestinians from accessing. (AP)
Roads leading to olive tree lands blocked near Ramallah to prevent Palestinians from accessing. (AP)
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PA Accuses Settlers of Escalating Attacks During Olive Harvest Season

Roads leading to olive tree lands blocked near Ramallah to prevent Palestinians from accessing. (AP)
Roads leading to olive tree lands blocked near Ramallah to prevent Palestinians from accessing. (AP)

Israeli settlers have escalated their attacks against Palestinian farmers and their lands across the West Bank, Palestinian Agriculture Minister Riyad al-Attari said on Monday, stressing that these attacks aim to harm the olive harvest season.

“We saw trees being cut down and fires set in Salfit, Nablus and Ramallah, and farmers were prevented from accessing their lands in Bethlehem,” he told the official news agency.

Attari's remarks were made few days after the beginning of the harvest season in the Palestinian territories.

Every year, settlers target farmers and their lands during this period, which Palestinians consider a national occasion to make profits.

Settlers take advantage of the fact that many of the olive oil-producing villages are located near their settlements and fall under the control of the Israeli army.

Israeli settlers attacked on Monday Palestinian farmers harvesting their olive crops in the village of Burqa, northeast of Ramallah, according to the village’s Head of Local Council Adnan Habas.

He added that settlers also threw stones at the farmers, who attempted to fend off the attack, inflicting injuries on five of them and damaging two vehicles.

The governor of Ramallah and al-Bireh, Laila Ghannam, stressed that assaults and crimes carried out by settlers under the support of Israeli army forces will only “increase our people’s determination and adherence to their lands and olives.”

Targeting defenseless citizens and destroying their vehicles are criminal practices that demonstrate the hatred of the occupation, its tyranny and insistence on the flagrant violation of all human rights, she noted.

Palestinians also reported settlers stealing olives in lands behind the apartheid wall near the settlement of Etz Efraim, which is established near Salfit in the northern West Bank.

Farmers said settlers stole and damaged the harvest of nearly 60 olive planted on a 120-dunum land.

Thefts were also reported in a village in Nablus. A video showed settlers stealing olive crops from Palestinian lands and vandalizing trees.

Numerous assaults and thefts were recorded within one week, such as cutting trees and setting them on fire, as well as preventing farmers from accessing their lands.

On Monday, Israeli army forces used their bulldozers to close a number of agricultural roads in western Jenin.

The deputy head of Rummaneh Village Council, Nidal al-Ahmad, said forces were also placing blocks in a number of lands to prevent Palestinian citizens from accessing them.



Five ISIS Bombs Found Hidden in Iconic Mosul Mosque in Iraq

(FILES) This picture taken on January 18, 2022 shows renovations at the al-Nuri mosque in the old town of Iraq's northern city Mosul. (Photo by Zaid AL-OBEIDI / AFP)
(FILES) This picture taken on January 18, 2022 shows renovations at the al-Nuri mosque in the old town of Iraq's northern city Mosul. (Photo by Zaid AL-OBEIDI / AFP)
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Five ISIS Bombs Found Hidden in Iconic Mosul Mosque in Iraq

(FILES) This picture taken on January 18, 2022 shows renovations at the al-Nuri mosque in the old town of Iraq's northern city Mosul. (Photo by Zaid AL-OBEIDI / AFP)
(FILES) This picture taken on January 18, 2022 shows renovations at the al-Nuri mosque in the old town of Iraq's northern city Mosul. (Photo by Zaid AL-OBEIDI / AFP)

A United Nations agency said it has discovered five bombs in a wall of Mosul's iconic Al-Nuri mosque, planted years ago by ISIS militants, during restoration work in the northern Iraqi city.

Five "large-scale explosive devices, designed to trigger a massive destruction of the site," were found in the southern wall of the prayer hall on Tuesday by the UNESCO team working at the site, a representative for the agency told AFP late Friday.

Mosul's Al-Nuri mosque and the adjacent leaning minaret nicknamed Al-Hadba or the "hunchback", which dates from the 12th century, were destroyed during the battle to retake the city from ISIS.

Iraq's army accused ISIS, which occupied Mosul for three years, of planting explosives at the site and blowing it up.

UNESCO, the UN cultural agency, has been working to restore the mosque and other architectural heritage sites in the city, much of it reduced to rubble in the battle to retake it in 2017.

"The Iraqi armed forces immediately secured the area and the situation is now fully under control," UNESCO added.

One bomb was removed, but four other 1.5-kilogram devices "remain connected to each other" and are expected to be cleared in the coming days, it said.

"These explosive devices were hidden inside a wall, which was specially rebuilt around them: it explains why they could not be discovered when the site was cleared by Iraqi forces" in 2020, the agency said.

Iraqi General Tahseen al-Khafaji, spokesperson for the Joint Operations Command of various Iraqi forces, confirmed the discovery of "several explosive devices from ISIS militants in Al-Nuri mosque."

He said provincial deminers requested help from the Defense Ministry in Baghdad to defuse the remaining munitions because of their "complex manufacturing".

Construction work has been suspended at the site until the bombs are removed.

It was from Al-Nuri mosque that Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi, the then-leader of ISIS, proclaimed the establishment of the group's "caliphate" in July 2014.