Sleepless Nights for Mothers of Palestinians Jailed in Occupied West Bank

Latifa Abu Hamid, 74, sits near portraits of her children, at her house in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank. Zain JAAFAR / AFP
Latifa Abu Hamid, 74, sits near portraits of her children, at her house in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank. Zain JAAFAR / AFP
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Sleepless Nights for Mothers of Palestinians Jailed in Occupied West Bank

Latifa Abu Hamid, 74, sits near portraits of her children, at her house in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank. Zain JAAFAR / AFP
Latifa Abu Hamid, 74, sits near portraits of her children, at her house in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank. Zain JAAFAR / AFP

"I don't sleep anymore," Latifa Abu Hamid said while looking at pictures of her children hanging on the walls of her living room, two women and 10 men. All have passed through Israeli prisons.
Four are still languishing in jail while a fifth died in custody 14 months ago. His body remains in the hands of the Israelis, she said.
Another died in 1994, in an operation triggered by the death of an Israeli, AFP said.
Hamid, 74, said she wanted to pave "another path" for her children, one of "education and knowledge".
"Every mother's dream is to teach their children and to see them start families. There is no mother who says to their children: 'Go and attack'", she said.
"No mother wants their son to be behind bars or to be killed," she added, yet her children "live the reality" of an occupied territory.
"When they see a mother and a father being beaten in front of them and they see hundreds of heavily armed soldiers storming a camp, a village or a town and wreaking havoc, they store those events in their memory... and chart their own course accordingly."
Hamid lives in a house in Ramallah, in the occupied West Bank, given to her by the president of the Palestinian Authority, which has its seat in the city.
Her home, in the Al-Amari refugee camp, was demolished three times by Israeli authorities who eventually confiscated the land on which the house was built.
Israel demolishes the homes of Palestinians who take part in attacks that kill Israelis. It is a policy denounced by human rights organizations who say it is a collective punishment.
For Hamid, what matters most is the fate of her children still detained by Israel.
The situation has become more complicated for her since the start of the war in Gaza.
Israeli authorities have announced a state of emergency in the prison system, which has translated into harsher conditions for detainees, including an end to family visits.
The war was triggered by Hamas's October 7 attack on southern Israel, which resulted in about 1,160 deaths, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
Israel's retaliatory assault on Gaza, aimed at destroying Hamas, has killed at least 30,878 people, mostly women and children, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory.
'Forever scarred'
Since October 7, according to the Palestinian Authority, more than 420 Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank by Israeli forces or settlers. Thousands of others have been arrested.
Palestinian prisoner advocacy groups say the number of incarcerated Palestinians has jumped from 5,200 before October 7 to about 9,000.
Hamid said she had "no information" about her jailed children.
"We hear information that a detainee has died or another is ill," she said.
"In the morning, I open the living room, I greet my children one by one, I talk to them and I tell them about myself," she said.
"I give the impression of being strong and solid, and I have a great faith in God," which, she said, hides intense sadness and pain.
For other Palestinian mothers, the drama is larger and more recent.
Among them is Ibtissam Hussein Hazza, 53, who said she was "forever scarred" by January 7.
That day, four of her 10 children were killed in a drone strike in Jenin, in the north of the West Bank.
"One of my sons called me and told me that his brother was martyred. I tried to call... my sons, but no one answered," she said.
The shock caused her to have a stroke affecting her left arm and leg, she said.
Seven people who were in a cafe were killed, witnesses said, including Hazza's sons Darwin, 29, Hazza, 27, Ahmed, 24 and Rami, 22.
A Israeli army spokeswoman said they were a "group of terrorists" who that day had launched "explosive devices at a military vehicle" resulting in the death of an Israeli soldier and injuring others.
Hazza insisted her sons never took part in any attack.
"I don't know how they died. Did they suffer a lot?" she said.
"I don't sleep anymore... at most two hours. I wake up in the night and pray... I open their photo albums and look at them for hours."



Germany Deports Man to Syria for First Time Since 2011

People attend a protest against reelection of Syria's president Bashar al-Assad, near Syria's embassy, Berlin, Germany May 26, 2021. (Reuters)
People attend a protest against reelection of Syria's president Bashar al-Assad, near Syria's embassy, Berlin, Germany May 26, 2021. (Reuters)
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Germany Deports Man to Syria for First Time Since 2011

People attend a protest against reelection of Syria's president Bashar al-Assad, near Syria's embassy, Berlin, Germany May 26, 2021. (Reuters)
People attend a protest against reelection of Syria's president Bashar al-Assad, near Syria's embassy, Berlin, Germany May 26, 2021. (Reuters)

Germany deported a man to Syria for the first time since the civil war began in that country in 2011, the interior ministry in Berlin announced on Tuesday.

A Syrian immigrant previously convicted of criminal offences in Germany was flown to Damascus and handed over to Syrian authorities on Tuesday morning, the ministry said.


Army: Lebanese Soldier among Those Killed in Monday Israeli Strike

Lebanese soldiers secure the site of an Israeli drone strike that targeted a truck in the village of Sibline, south of Beirut, on December 16, 2025. (Photo by Mahmoud ZAYYAT / AFP)
Lebanese soldiers secure the site of an Israeli drone strike that targeted a truck in the village of Sibline, south of Beirut, on December 16, 2025. (Photo by Mahmoud ZAYYAT / AFP)
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Army: Lebanese Soldier among Those Killed in Monday Israeli Strike

Lebanese soldiers secure the site of an Israeli drone strike that targeted a truck in the village of Sibline, south of Beirut, on December 16, 2025. (Photo by Mahmoud ZAYYAT / AFP)
Lebanese soldiers secure the site of an Israeli drone strike that targeted a truck in the village of Sibline, south of Beirut, on December 16, 2025. (Photo by Mahmoud ZAYYAT / AFP)

A Lebanese soldier was among three people killed in an Israeli air strike on a car in the country's south, the army said Tuesday, denying Israeli claims that he was also a Hezbollah operative.

Israel has kept up regular strikes on Lebanon, usually saying it is targeting Hezbollah, despite a November 2024 ceasefire that sought to end more than a year of hostilities with the Iran-backed militant group, which it accuses of rearming.

Lebanon's state-run National News Agency said Monday's strike on a vehicle was carried out by an Israeli drone around 10 kilometers (six miles) from the southern coastal city of Sidon and "killed three people who were inside".

The Lebanese army said on Tuesday that Sergeant Major Ali Abdullah had been killed the previous day "in an Israeli airstrike that targeted a car he was in" near the city of Sidon.

The Israeli army said it had killed three Hezbollah operatives in the strike, adding in a statement on Tuesday that "one of the terrorists eliminated during the strike simultaneously served in the Lebanese intelligence unit".

A Lebanese army official told AFP it was "not true" that the soldier was a Hezbollah member, calling Israel's claim "a pretext" to justify the attack.

Under heavy US pressure and amid fears of expanded Israeli strikes, Lebanon has committed to disarming Hezbollah, starting with the south.

The Lebanese army plans to complete the group's disarmament south of the Litani River -- about 30 kilometers from the border with Israel -- by year's end.

The latest strike came after Lebanese and Israeli civilian representatives on Friday took part in a meeting of the ceasefire monitoring committee for a second time, after holding their first direct talks in decades earlier this month.

The committee comprises representatives from Lebanon, Israel, the United States, France and the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL).

More than 340 people have been killed by Israeli fire in Lebanon since the ceasefire, according to an AFP tally of Lebanese health ministry reports.


Israel Defense Minister Vows to Stay in Gaza, Establish Outposts

Palestinians amid rubble of destroyed buildings in Jabalia, northern Gaza Strip (AFP)
Palestinians amid rubble of destroyed buildings in Jabalia, northern Gaza Strip (AFP)
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Israel Defense Minister Vows to Stay in Gaza, Establish Outposts

Palestinians amid rubble of destroyed buildings in Jabalia, northern Gaza Strip (AFP)
Palestinians amid rubble of destroyed buildings in Jabalia, northern Gaza Strip (AFP)

Defense Minister Israel Katz on Tuesday vowed Israel will remain in Gaza and pledged to establish outposts in the north of the Palestinian territory, according to a video of a speech published by Israeli media. 

His remarks, reported across Israeli media, come as a fragile US-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Hamas holds in Gaza, said AFP. 

Mediators are pressing for the implementation of the next phases of the truce, which would involve an Israeli withdrawal from the territory. 

Speaking at an event in the Israeli settlement of Beit El in the occupied West Bank, Katz said: "We are deep inside Gaza, and we will never leave Gaza -- there will be no such thing." 

"We are there to protect, to prevent what happened (from happening again)," he added, according to a video published by Israeli news site Ynet. 

Katz also vowed to establish outposts in the north of Gaza in place of settlements that had been evacuated during Israel's unilateral disengagement from the territory in 2005. 

"When the time comes, God willing, we will establish in northern Gaza, Nahal outposts in place of the communities that were uprooted," Katz said, referring to military-agricultural settlements set up by Israeli soldiers. 

"We will do this in the right way and at the appropriate time." 

Katz's remarks were slammed by former minister and chief of staff Gadi Eisenkot, who accused the government of "acting against the broad national consensus, during a critical period for Israel's national security." 

"While the government votes with one hand in favor of the Trump plan, with the other hand it sells fables about isolated settlement nuclei in the (Gaza) Strip," he wrote on X, referring to the Gaza peace plan brokered by US President Donald Trump. 

The next phases of Trump's plan would involve an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, the establishment of an interim authority to govern the territory in place of Hamas and the deployment of an international stabilization force. 

It also envisages the demilitarization of Gaza, including the disarmament of Hamas, which the group has refused. 

On Thursday, several Israelis entered the Gaza Strip in defiance of army orders and held a symbolic flag-raising ceremony to call for the reoccupation and resettlement of the Palestinian territory.