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.



Iran to Support Hezbollah Militarily if Israel Launches War on Lebanon

An Israeli firefighter works to extinguish fires ignited by missiles launched by Hezbollah from southern Lebanon (Reuters)
An Israeli firefighter works to extinguish fires ignited by missiles launched by Hezbollah from southern Lebanon (Reuters)
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Iran to Support Hezbollah Militarily if Israel Launches War on Lebanon

An Israeli firefighter works to extinguish fires ignited by missiles launched by Hezbollah from southern Lebanon (Reuters)
An Israeli firefighter works to extinguish fires ignited by missiles launched by Hezbollah from southern Lebanon (Reuters)

Iran announced its readiness to support Hezbollah militarily in the event that Israel launches a large-scale war on Lebanon.

An advisor to the Iranian leader, Kamal Kharrazi, said that his country “will do its best to support [Hezbollah] if Israel launched a large-scale war against Lebanon,” the official Lebanese National News Agency reported.

In response to a question on whether Iran would support the party militarily in case of a large-scale conflict erupting in Lebanon, Kharrazi, who also serves as head of the Iranian Strategic Council for International Relations, indicated that “in such a case, Tehran will not have any other option.”

He continued: “We will have no choice but to support [Hezbollah] with all the means and capabilities available to us.”

The Iranian position comes in conjunction with Israeli threats to expand the war, and the Israeli army’s preparations in the north for a wide-scale confrontation in Lebanon.

“We are determined to continue fighting until the war goals of destroying the military and governmental capabilities of Hamas, the return of the kidnappers, and the safe return of residents in the north and south to their homes are achieved,” the Israeli army said, adding: “We are strengthening preparations for war on the northern front against Hezbollah.”

However, these statements come in parallel with other leaks that suggest that the army was not ready for a large-scale war. An article published by the New York Times said that Israeli generals believe that their forces, which are “underequipped for further fighting after Israel’s longest war in decades... need time to recuperate in case a land war breaks out against Hezbollah.”

“A truce with Hamas could also make it easier to reach a deal with Hezbollah, according to the officials, most of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive security matters,” the NY Times article read.

Meanwhile, Israeli media reported that a house in Kiryat Shmona was hit by projectiles fired from Lebanon, while Israeli attacks in South Lebanon killed a farmer who had remained in his town despite the onslaught.

The NNA said that an Israeli drone attacked the town of Taybeh in South Lebanon with three missiles, with one of them hitting an electricity transformer.