In the occupied West Bank, the war continues

A week has passed since the ceasefire was declared in Gaza. We celebrated when we learned the news in the West Bank. We hoped that the genocide had ended peacefully. However, we also realized that we cannot maintain a ceasefire.

Our decades of constant violence do not seem to be abating. The brutality of our occupier has only increased since October 7, 2023. Living in the West Bank is now almost impossible.

Violence, drug possession, and paralysis

A friend’s young daughter cheered upon the announcement of the ceasefire agreement, and she later requested that she go pick some olives with her grandparents. She responded, “Why? I told him it would be challenging. The war is not over, right?

How do you explain to a young child that Palestinian West Bank families still have access to their land to grow olives after the war ends in Gaza? Due to the barriers the Israeli military has built, people are still unable to access their groves, or they fear Israeli soldiers and settlers attacking them, or both.

Palestinian farmers are subject to daily violent assaults on their property. Israeli settlers have attacked Palestinians and property since October 7, 2023, some of which have been fatal.

More than 10,000 Palestinians have been displaced and almost 1, 000 have been killed by the Israeli army and settler mobs, including 212 children. Since October 7, 2023, soldiers and settlers have systematically destroyed 237 olive trees.

Even urban life has become intolerable.

I live in Rawabi, a city north of Ramallah, and I too experience daily suffocation from the occupation.

I could spend hours stranded at a checkpoint if I have to leave my city to run errands, shop, get official paperwork, or do anything else. Between Rawabi and Ramallah, which has four iron gates, a military tower, and a barrier, can take an eternity to travel between Rawabi and Ramallah in 10 minutes.

There are 243 Israeli barriers, barriers, and iron gates throughout the West Bank, all of which were constructed after October 7, 2023. A Palestinian may spend hours stuck inside one barrier due to how they are configured by the Israeli army. Every aspect of life is impacted by this, from school attendance to urgent medical care to transportation of goods.

Additionally, we have been denied access to Jerusalem and Al-Aqsa Mosque, which in turn restricts our right to worship. Few Palestinians receive the necessary special permits to enter the city, according to wikipedia. Years ago, we last had access to Jerusalem, which was more than 20 years ago. This implies that a whole generation of young people only know about the city from their parents and grandparents’ pictures and stories.

The occupation does not leave the Palestinians alone, even at night. The Israeli army may conduct a&nbsp, an a&nbsp, raid, or home invasion against any Palestinians; soldiers may break the front door, terrorize the family inside, and imprison some of its members without charge. Israeli soldiers would also be terrorized if they shot tear gas canisters without warning, only to cause more suffering nearby.

The Palestinians in the West Bank are denied all rights to a normal life, including the right to worship, to pass peacefully with friends and family, to move freely, to receive regular medical care and education.

Annexation carries the spectre of fear.

Israel has largely occupied the West Bank, with almost half of it under Israeli control over the years since the occupation of 1967. By designating its land as “state land” or “military zone,” it has been used to build settlements and seize land from its Palestinian owners. At least 12,300 acres (4, 9787 hectares) of Palestinian land were taken in two years, accelerating the theft of the land.

In many cases, confiscated land is used to build new settlements or to expand existing ones.

The West Bank’s settlements are not built at random. Instead of preventing any sort of geographical continuity between Palestinian territories, land is chosen in a way that surrounds Palestinian villages and towns, creating a settlement belt around them, thereby thwarting the dream of a future state.

Israel has also used the West Bank’s natural resources to maintain these illegal settlements. Nearly all water resources have been seized by it. In the West Bank, as a result of this, a sizable water reservoir was established to support settlement expansion.

This has had disastrous effects on the Palestinians. They are now largely dependent on the Israeli company “Mekorot,” which distributes only a small portion of the Palestinian population’s water supply to densely populated areas, while settlers are paid several times the Palestinian share per capita.

Palestinians are compelled to purchase extra water from Mekorot at exorbitant prices each summer as drought settles in. Palestinian rainwater tanks and wells are frequently attacked and destroyed in the meantime.

The Israeli government’s annexation efforts have gotten more aggressive since October 7, 2023. Area C, which was established as a result of the Oslo Accords and under which Israel is under total civilian and security control, is a concern, in our opinion, is about to be taken over. This would mean razing Palestinian towns and communities and moving people to Area A, which makes up only 18% of the West Bank. Following will be Area B. Bedouin communities in the two regions are already engaged in the forced expulsion process.

In the West Bank, this is what we experience. We are unaware of peace conferences and meetings that were held and that were declared in the Middle East. We are threatened, intimidated, dispossessed, and killed every day, every hour, every minute.

Israel has resisted political solutions for decades and has a policy of swaying people, land, and resources. Even after its bombardment has ended, it has continued to fight us. Recognizing and ending the occupation is the only way to bring about true peace.

Gaza ceasefire: Peace deal or political theatre?

The spectacle of the release of the prisoners in Israel and Gaza and the double standards in the reporting of the deal.

Israel continues to murder Palestinians as Donald Trump tries to credit the ceasefire in Gaza. The glaring double standards in coverage exposed how this genocide was allowed to continue for so long as both Israeli and Palestinian prisoners were released.

Contributors: 
Tahani Mustafa, European Council on Foreign Relations Visiting Fellow
Jadaliya co-editor Mouin Rabbani
Former Human Rights Watch executive director Kenneth Roth
Oren Ziv, journalist, + 972 Magazine

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Dozens injured, heavy security in Kenya as Odinga mourned before burial

As a result of the large crowds that gathered to view the body of revered former prime minister Raila Odinga at a memorial event in Kenya’s western city of Kisumu, hundreds of people were reported as a result of local media reports.

Despite authorities using military vehicles, police, and aerial surveillance to stop a recurrence of deadly and chaotic incidents that marked earlier memorial proceedings on Thursday and Friday, the injuries happened on Saturday at Jomo Kenyata International Stadium.

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As the crowds swarmed inside the facility, Kenya Red Cross teams treated those who had exhausted and were in agony and managed to avoid casualties.

Zealots of people from all over the area gathered to pay their respects on Sunday as Odinga’s body was transported through Kisumu to his ancestral home in nearby Bondo for burial.

At least five people were killed by violence and chaos during the 80-year-old opposition leader and statesman’s memorial procession on Wednesday in Kerala, India.

Raila Odinga was praised by Kisumu Governor Anyang ‘ Nyong’o for his lifelong service to Kenyans, noting that thousands of people “thronged” Jomo Kenyatta Stadium-Mamboleo in his honor.

As the arrangements for transporting Odinga’s body to his ancestral home in Bondo, which is located 40 kilometers west of Kisumu, where the most recent disruptions had occurred, were in progress, Siaya County Governor James Orengo urged restraint.

Orengo told local media, “I really ask that the public and the community as a whole keep the peace during this time.”

At least three people were killed at a Nairobi stadium when security forces shot tear gas and weapons at crowds heading towards the pavilion where Odinga’s coffin had been placed on Thursday, causing at least three to die.

A day later, panic set in as mourners departed from Friday’s state funeral service in a different capital location, causing a crowd-crush that claimed the lives of two more victims and treated 163 patients.

Since Odinga’s body returned home on Thursday, a sizable turnout has persisted throughout the duration of the mourning process, with supporters escorting his remains nearly 30 kilometers (20 miles) from Nairobi’s airport.

Tens of thousands of people gathered for the state ceremony on Friday to honor the reverend known as “Baba,” the Swahili word for father, who sang, danced, and waved handkerchiefs.

Odinga’s relatives pleaded for peaceful conduct at the service, which included Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud and President William Ruto.

Raila should not be left to cry when she passes away, his brother Oburu said in a statement to the crowd. When he was still alive, he had enough teargass.

In a post on X, former US President Barack Obama honored Odinga as “a true champion of democracy” who “enhanced decades of struggle and sacrifice for the greater cause of freedom and self-governance in Kenya.”

Obama noted that Odinga “was willing to choose the path of peaceful reconciliation without downplaying his core beliefs.”

Odinga served five unsuccessful presidential campaigns that spanned three decades, but she had a greater impact on Kenya’s democratic development than many others. This has caused a wave of grief both nationally and internationally.