Israeli settlers attack more Palestinians as olive harvest violence surges

As the violence against residents who are stealing their olive trees intensifies, Israeli settlers have attacked a number of Palestinian villages in the occupied West Bank.

According to the Palestinian Wafa news agency, settlers reportedly attacked farmers in the village of Deir Nidham, northwest of Ramallah, injuring at least three Palestinians on Saturday.

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Wafa quoted local activist and activist Mujahid Tamimi saying that settlers beat the farmers with rifle butts and forced them to leave their land near the village’s western entrance.

Motasem Abdullah Tamimi, a 31-year-old resident, was later detained by Israeli forces in the village to protect the settlers, Tamimi added.

In the wake of Israel’s deadly war on the Gaza Strip, which started in October 2023, Palestinians across the West Bank have experienced a rise in Israeli military and settler violence.

More than 1, 000 Palestinians have been killed and more than 10, 000 others have been injured as a result of Israeli military and settler attacks, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health.

However, the olive harvest season this year, which typically begins in October, has seen an even more intense wave of violence.

Nour Odeh of Al Jazeera reported that settler attacks “usually occur in the company and protection of Israeli soldiers who occasionally engage in them.”

According to Odeh, “the settlers are armed, dangerous, and many of them serve in the army,” according to Odeh, who added that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s right-wing government has “emboldened” the settlers.

She reported that “the attacks are intended to drive Palestinians out of their homes, creating an environment where staying in one’s town is simply untenable and unsafe.”

Many Palestinians’ primary economic interests are inscribed in olive trees, and it is a significant cultural pillar of Palestinian society.

According to UN statistics, between 80 000 and 100 000 families rely on olive oil for their main and secondary income sources.

The Palestinian Wall and Settlement Resistance Commission has reported 158 attacks on olive pickers in total since the start of the current year’s campaign.

141 settlers, who enjoy what human rights groups have called total impunity for violent acts against Palestinians, carried out by the Israeli army, and 141 by Israeli settlers.

Farmers across the West Bank have also been prevented from accessing their lands by Israeli forces for the second week in a row.

In Kafr Malek, east of Ramallah, settlers sprayed pepper gas on Palestinian farmers on Saturday, injuring several people.

Ahmad Shakarna, 65, was beaten while he was picking olives with his family in the village of Nahalin, close to Bethlehem, by a settler and three Israeli soldiers in a separate incident.

Israeli forces dispersed farmers who were trying to reach their lands in the al-Baqa’a region with tear gas and sound bombs in Beit Awwa, southwest of Hebron.

In addition, armed settlers attacked farmers and took their tools from the Aqraba and Qabalan villages south of Nablus. Before being forced to flee their land, three Palestinians were seriously hurt in those attacks.

More than 700,000 Israeli settlers reside in more than 250 settlements and outposts across the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, which are deemed to be prohibited by international law.

Connolly set to be Ireland’s next president after rival concedes defeat

After her rival conceded defeat, left-leaning independent candidate Catherine Connolly will take office as Ireland’s next leader.

On Saturday, the presidential election was still being counted, but center-right Fine Gael party member Heather Humphreys reportedly wished Catherine Connolly well as congratulated her on becoming Ireland’s next leader.

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“Catherine will be my president, and she will be my president,” Humphreys said. “I really would like to wish her all the very, very best.”

After all 43 electoral constituencies across the nation have finished counting, the final result of Friday’s election is scheduled to be announced later on Saturday. Voting slips were being manually counted.

Connolly, 68, had strong voter support in the polls over Humphreys, 64, who she had defeated.

Simon Harris, the deputy prime minister and leader of the Fine Gael, quickly wished Connolly “every success,” adding, “She will be President for all this country.”

He wrote on X that “her success will be Ireland’s success.”

On October 25, 2025, the RDS count center in Dublin, Ireland, will begin counting votes.

Connolly, a former barrister and independent lawmaker since 2016, has won the support of a number of left-leaning parties, including Sinn Fein, the Labour Party, and the Social Democrats. He has been outspoken about criticizing Israel for its war in Gaza.

Young people who supported her strong pro-Palestine stance and her commitment to social justice, among other things, found her campaign to be particularly well-liked.

After Jim Gavin, the candidate for Fianna Fail in the government of prime minister Micheal Martin, quitting the race three weeks prior to the election due to a long-standing financial dispute, Connolly and Humphreys were the only contenders. Gavin was backed by Martin in the race.

While Irish presidents are world leaders, host visiting heads of state, and play a significant constitutional role, they are not in the position to pass laws or regulations.

The winner will succeed Michael D. Higgins, who has served the maximum of two seven-year terms as president.

Early voting begins in New York mayor’s race with Mamdani ahead in polls

The New York City mayor’s race, one of the year’s most closely watched elections, has officially begun in-person voting.

On Saturday, voters in New York chose Democrat Zohran Mamdani, a Republican running mate, and Democrat Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat who is expected to cast as an independent. Eric Adams, the current mayor, is also on the ballot, but he pulled out of the race last month and recently backed Cuomo.

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Democratic Socialist candidate Mamdani’s proposals for free buses, child care, and a rent freeze for New Yorkers who reside in about 1 million rent-regulated apartments have energized liberal voters.

Mamdani, who would become the city’s first Muslim mayor, has been criticized by Cuomo for his remarks toward Israel.

A UN inquiry, genocide experts, and numerous human rights organizations all agree that Israel’s military actions in Gaza constitute genocide, according to Mamdani, who has withstanded anti-Muslim rhetoric during the contest.

Mamdani criticized him for being “racist and baseless” in a speech delivered on Friday.

“To expect indignity in New York is to be Muslim, but it does not distinguish us.” Many New Yorkers are confronted by it. Mamdani, who defeated Cuomo in the Democratic mayoral primary in June, won a landslide victory. “It is the tolerance of that indignity that does.

Cuomo has described Mamdani’s actions as foolish and financially reckless. He has made appeals to the electorate to choose him based on his state’s governor’s experience, which he relinquished in 2021 after numerous women accused him of sexual harassment.

Since 2019, early voting has become a common practice in New York. According to the city’s campaign finance board, about 35 percent of the ballots were cast early and in person in the mayoral primary in June.

The governor’s race in the nearby state of New Jersey is closely followed as well. Democratic US Representative Mikie Sherrill and Republican state representative Jack Ciattarelli are in the contest. In 2021, New Jersey enacted early voting.

Democratic Party leaders may use the two states’ off-year elections as bellwethers as they decide which candidates will best support their opposition to Republican President Donald Trump’s agenda.

According to Ashley Koning, director of the Eagleton Center for Public Interest Polling at Rutgers University in New Jersey, the races have highlighted affordability and cost of living issues as well as ongoing divisions within the Democratic Party.

In Mamdani vs. Cuomo, New York City pits the progressive wing against the established old guard, while New Jersey is betting on moderate candidate Mikie Sherrill to appeal to its broad middle, she said.

In their final debate earlier this month, the candidates for governor of New Jersey sparred over the state’s high cost of living, Sherrill’s military records, Trump’s policies, and the shutdown.

El-Fasher: Siege, starvation and a media blackout

Sudanese journalists struggle to report a war that has been buried by blackouts and widespread neglect as El-Fasher is starved.

El-Fasher, Sudan, is largely unknown, besieged, and starving. One of the worst humanitarian crises in history is being concealed by a lack of international media interest as journalists are subject to criticism in Sudan.

Contributors:
Hassan Berkia, a journalist
Confluence Advisory Director, Kholood Khair
Associate Professor, McGill Institute of Islamic Studies, Khalid Medani

On our radar:

American journalist Jasper Nathaniel documented Israeli settlers attacking Palestinians while they were preparing to harvest olives in the occupied West Bank. Nathaniel is informed by what he saw and what it reveals about Israel’s impunity culture.

India’s news organizations once served as vibrant democracy’s. Many of India’s neighbors still view them as propaganda tools because they export jingoism, sensationalism, and Hindutva politics across borders. Meenakshi Ravi discusses the rise in anti-India sentiment and a national security crisis.

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