Settlers Start Their Yearly War on The Olive Season

An 84-year-old Palestinian woman unloads fresh olives on her farm in Kafr al-Labad, a village near Tulkarm (EPA)
An 84-year-old Palestinian woman unloads fresh olives on her farm in Kafr al-Labad, a village near Tulkarm (EPA)
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Settlers Start Their Yearly War on The Olive Season

An 84-year-old Palestinian woman unloads fresh olives on her farm in Kafr al-Labad, a village near Tulkarm (EPA)
An 84-year-old Palestinian woman unloads fresh olives on her farm in Kafr al-Labad, a village near Tulkarm (EPA)

Israeli settlers, who are becoming more powerful by the year and have established terrorist factions known as Price-Tag for such acts, initiated their customary yearly war on the olive harvest season. They launched their habitual attacks on the helpless Palestinian people in villages close to the settlements in the north and south of the West Bank, vying to spoil what many Palestinians consider an occasion for national celebration and reaping profit.

Palestinian Liberation Organization’s National Office for the Defense of Land and Resistance to Settlement issued a report condemning gangs of settlers and occupation forces for exploiting the yearly international solidarity campaigns’ absence as a result of the coronavirus pandemic to burn Palestinian farmers’ trees to prevent them from accessing their land, attack them, steal olives and flood olive tree fields with sewage.

This year’s harvest season began with “settlers setting fire to old olive trees in the village of Safa, west of Ramallah, by throwing Molotov cocktails, which ignited large fires, destroying hundreds of olive trees, in Wadi Al-Malaki, Al-Kursana, Batin Hariz, and Batin Al-Hump.

“The fires went on for more than 3 hours, as the occupation authorities colluded with the settlers, preventing the residents and owners of land lying behind the annexation wall from reaching it to put out the fire and salvage their trees.”

In Hebron, a group of settlers chopped dozens of olive trees near the Mitzpe Yair settlement, east of Yatta in southern Hebron. In Huwara, south of Nablus, six volunteers suffered various injuries after being attacked by more than 30 settlers from Yitzhar while picking olives in the Jabal Al-Lahef area on the first day of the Fazaa Zaitoun campaign to support landowners during the olive season.

Unsatisfied, they also set fire to several olive trees before leaving and launched several over attacks. Settlers from the nearby settlement of Lashim, for example, torched an olive grove in the town of Deir Ballut in western Salfit, burning tens of olive trees.

The setters take advantage of their proximity to most of the villages where the Palestinian olive trees that bear some of the world’s finest olives are planted, as the Israeli occupation army controls these areas. They are spurred on by the sermons of rabies, like Mordechai Eliyahu, who claims that “This land (Judea and Samaria/ the West Bank) belongs to the people of Israel and if gentiles plant on this land, both the tree and the fruit it yields is ours, because they the land belongs to us, not them.”

Murad Shteiwi, director of the PLO’s National Office for the Defense of Land and Resistance to Settlement, says: “The Israeli occupation authorities’ designation of 130 zones in the West Bank as closed military zones damages the olive season and farmers’ access to their land."

In an interview with Voice of Palestine radio on Saturday, he called on volunteers to organize to help farmers on the groves threatened by settlements and document the attacks.

Some olive trees are thousands of years old, and while there are no official estimates of the number of olive trees in Palestine, researchers estimate them at around one million trees.

Olive cultivation yields between and 15 and 30 tons a year.



French Boats Set Sail to Join Gaza Aid Flotilla

Activists gather in l'Estaque, part of Marseille's harbor, southern France, on April 4, 2026, during a rally in support of a flotilla carrying activists from “Thousand Madleens to Gaza” movement as they prepare to set sail. (AFP)
Activists gather in l'Estaque, part of Marseille's harbor, southern France, on April 4, 2026, during a rally in support of a flotilla carrying activists from “Thousand Madleens to Gaza” movement as they prepare to set sail. (AFP)
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French Boats Set Sail to Join Gaza Aid Flotilla

Activists gather in l'Estaque, part of Marseille's harbor, southern France, on April 4, 2026, during a rally in support of a flotilla carrying activists from “Thousand Madleens to Gaza” movement as they prepare to set sail. (AFP)
Activists gather in l'Estaque, part of Marseille's harbor, southern France, on April 4, 2026, during a rally in support of a flotilla carrying activists from “Thousand Madleens to Gaza” movement as they prepare to set sail. (AFP)

Some 20 French boats set sail from Marseille on Saturday to join up with an international flotilla making a renewed effort to break an Israeli blockade and deliver aid to Gaza, AFP reporters saw.

"Gaza, Marseille is with you" shouted around a thousand people who had come to the docks to support the initiative.

The ships, mostly sailboats, set off to a round of applause and songs shortly after 5:00 pm (1500 GMT) to join the "Global Sumud Flotilla", named after a Gazan fisherman.

The international flotilla of some 100 boats, mostly setting sail from Barcelona on April 12, will head towards Gaza around April 20, according to the organizers. A week-long stopover is planned in southern Italy for "non-violence training."

"The goal is to give Palestine more visibility. We're not talking about it much right now, because of the international context," said Manon, a crew member who declined to give her full name.

In late 2025, an initial flotilla of about 50 boats, composed of political figures and activists such as Sweden's Greta Thunberg, was boarded by the Israeli navy -- illegally according to the organizers and Amnesty International.

The crew members were arrested and expelled by Israel.

The Gaza Strip, governed by Hamas, has been under an Israeli blockade since 2007. Israel and the Palestinian movement accuse each other of violating a ceasefire that came into effect on October 10, 2025, after two years of war.


Tens of Thousands of Sadr Supporters Rally in Baghdad Against War

Followers of Iraq's Moqtada al-Sadr wave Iraqi national flags during a protest against the joint US-Israeli strikes on Iran, as they gather in Tahrir Square, Baghdad, Iraq, 04 April 2026. (EPA)
Followers of Iraq's Moqtada al-Sadr wave Iraqi national flags during a protest against the joint US-Israeli strikes on Iran, as they gather in Tahrir Square, Baghdad, Iraq, 04 April 2026. (EPA)
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Tens of Thousands of Sadr Supporters Rally in Baghdad Against War

Followers of Iraq's Moqtada al-Sadr wave Iraqi national flags during a protest against the joint US-Israeli strikes on Iran, as they gather in Tahrir Square, Baghdad, Iraq, 04 April 2026. (EPA)
Followers of Iraq's Moqtada al-Sadr wave Iraqi national flags during a protest against the joint US-Israeli strikes on Iran, as they gather in Tahrir Square, Baghdad, Iraq, 04 April 2026. (EPA)

Tens of thousands of supporters of Iraqi Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr rallied in Baghdad and across the country on Saturday, condemning Israel and the United States and demanding an end to the war.

The massive crowds came as the Middle East war was due to enter its sixth week after strikes launched by the US and Israel against Iran on February 28.

Iraq has been unwillingly drawn into the conflict, with strikes targeting US interests on its soil as well as attacks against pro-Iran groups in the country.

Tens of thousands of men and some women packed into the streets around Baghdad's central Tahrir Square on Saturday, waving the national flag and chanting: "No, no to Israel" and "No, no to America".

"What America and Israel are doing in their aggression against the countries of the region is not a war of a military nature, but a senseless war," Dhirgham Samir, attending the rally, told AFP.

"Today's demonstration is an expression of rejection of aggression, arrogance, and injustice throughout the world, not just in Iraq," he said.

Samir, who was in his forties, added that "this is a senseless war, targeting civilians".

Across the region since the onset of war thousands have been killed.

In a statement, Sadr called for peaceful demonstrations "to condemn the Zionist-American aggression and to establish peace in the region".

Under the giant Freedom Monument, commemorating Iraq's declaration of independence, demonstrators also railed against what they said was US and Israeli meddling in the region.

"They violate the rights of all the peoples of the region first, and then the world," cleric Ali Al-Fartousi told AFP.

"Humanity must speak out against these people and stop them," he said, adding: "The time has come for the entire world to stand united against global Zionist-American arrogance."

Sadr retains a devoted following of millions among Iraq's majority Shiite population, and has previously mobilized huge crowds.

As well as popular support, Sadr also has representatives among Iraqi ministries and official institutions, despite opposing several governments over the years.


Israeli Forces Destroy 17 UN Peacekeeper Cameras in South Lebanon

A dog lies an empty road outside a Lebanese army outpost in the area of Naqoura in southern Lebanon on March 27, 2026. (AFP)
A dog lies an empty road outside a Lebanese army outpost in the area of Naqoura in southern Lebanon on March 27, 2026. (AFP)
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Israeli Forces Destroy 17 UN Peacekeeper Cameras in South Lebanon

A dog lies an empty road outside a Lebanese army outpost in the area of Naqoura in southern Lebanon on March 27, 2026. (AFP)
A dog lies an empty road outside a Lebanese army outpost in the area of Naqoura in southern Lebanon on March 27, 2026. (AFP)

Israeli forces destroyed 17 surveillance cameras linked to the United Nations peacekeepers' main headquarters in southern Lebanon in 24 hours, a UN security official told AFP on Saturday.

Since the start of the Israel-Hezbollah war on March 2, the UN force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) has been caught in the crossfire in the country's south, with Hezbollah launching attacks on Israel and its troops, and Israeli forces pushing into border towns.

The official, who requested anonymity, said "17 of our headquarters' cameras have been destroyed by the Israeli army" in the coastal town of Naqoura.

On Thursday, UNIFIL spokeswoman Kandice Ardiel told AFP peacekeepers had seen "Israeli soldiers conducting demolitions of large parts" of Naqoura since the start of the week.

"Not only have these demolitions destroyed civilian homes and businesses, but the strength of the blasts have caused damage to UNIFIL's headquarters," she added.

Three Indonesian peacekeepers from the UN force have been killed in two separate incidents over the past week.

UNIFIL also reported Friday an "explosion" in one of its bases near Adaisseh in south Lebanon that wounded three personnel, adding that they "do not yet know the origin of the explosion".

The Israeli army accused Hezbollah of firing " a rocket that landed in a UNIFIL outpost".

The UN office in Jakarta said on Saturday the wounded were Indonesian.

Indonesia condemned the incident as "unacceptable", saying "these events underscore the urgent need to strengthen protection for UN peacekeeping forces amid an increasingly dangerous conflict situation".

According to the UN, 97 force members have been killed in violence since its establishment in 1978 to monitor the withdrawal of Israeli forces after they invaded Lebanon.

"This has been a difficult week for peacekeepers working near the central part of UNIFIL's area of operations," Ardiel said in her statement.

She added that UNIFIL "reminds all actors of their obligations to ensure the safety and security of peacekeepers, including by avoiding combat activities nearby that could put them in danger".