Palestinians watch as foreign Zionist settlers demolish their home near the Palestinian city of Hebron, in the Israeli-occupied Palestinian West Bank, June 8, 2026. REUTERS/Mussa Qawasma
Imagine some foreign barbarians with strange names and accents who come to your country from Europe or the US, cite biblical garbage from 3,000 years ago as their "rights" to your land where your ancestors have lived for millennia, tear your house down, uproot your olive trees, steal your animals, and build themselves a new house on the same spot.
What would you do?
Some countries from which these barbarians have come didn't do a thing for 70 years. Now faced with the intolerable violence their own citizens are inflicting on the indigenous Palestinians, these countries have begun taking very timid measures against a handful of the Zionist barbarians, but continue to choose to ignore that behind the Zionist settler criminals is an entire state, its government and its terrorist militia that protects and incites the settlers to more violence.
The sanctions against the few barbarian settlers should be extended and expanded to the entire government of Israel and its militia. Diplomatic relations with the Zionist colony in Palestine should be severed and trade banned.
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UN inquiry finds Israeli forces shield settlers during attacks on Palestinians
By Olivia Le Poidevin
Tue, June 9, 2026
GENEVA, June 9 (Reuters) - Israeli authorities are directly involved in settler attacks that have killed, injured and displaced Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, while Israeli security forces provide protection to settlers, a U.N. inquiry said on Tuesday.
The report by the Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory found that Israeli authorities had enabled settler attacks through financial and military support, in a climate of impunity fostered by judicial and law-enforcement bodies. It also found that the Palestinian militant group Hamas had committed war crimes against both Palestinians and Israelis.
The Israeli prime minister's office and military did not immediately respond to requests for comment, nor did Hamas.
The report said Israeli settler attacks on Palestinian villages and agricultural land had surged since 2023, rising by 130%, including incidents involving groups of masked assailants. Israeli security forces routinely accompanied settlers and acted as a shield for the violence, it said.
Israel rejects charges that its troops shield settlers during attacks on Palestinians in the West Bank, saying such actions are rogue incidents that violate military protocol and are investigated. Israeli and Palestinian rights groups say such investigations rarely lead to punishment.
Hundreds of thousands of Israeli settlers live among millions of Palestinians on land Israel captured in a 1967 war. Most countries consider such settlements a violation of international law, a position upheld in a 2024 ruling by the U.N.'s top court. Israel disputes this, citing historical and biblical ties to the land.
At least seven Palestinians were killed and 832 injured last year, with violence continuing into 2026 in the form of near-daily attacks, according to the United Nations.
"The increasing participation of Israeli security forces in settler attacks amounts to a de facto collapse of the distinction between settlers and soldiers," the report found.
It said such violence has been used to advance state policy, including the unlawful occupation, displacement of Palestinians and the annexation of Palestinian territory.
The commission documented cases of assaults, abductions and abuse of Palestinian children by settlers. In one incident on April 19, 2025, a 12-year-old girl and her 3-year-old brother were abducted at knifepoint, dragged to an olive grove and tied to a tree with plastic restraints until their family intervened.
The Commission also said settlers committed or threatened sexual violence to instil fear and harassed Palestinian women.
"The relentless, daily assaults by Israeli settlers against Palestinians are intolerable — and must end," said the commission's head, S. Muralidhar, an Indian former senior judge. He urged the international community to press Israel to dismantle settlements and outposts and curb the violence.
Despite periodic condemnations and the dismantling of some unauthorized outposts, Israeli authorities have not taken sustained measures to stop the attacks, the report said.
Wassel Abu Yousef, a member of the executive committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization, the body the U.N. recognises as representing Palestinians, told Reuters the report "reflects the extent of the violence perpetrated by settlers against our people". He called for measures such as sanctions in response.
HAMAS VIOLATIONS
The report said it was also gravely alarmed by serious abuses it documented in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip.
The commission found that Hamas-affiliated forces were involved in at least 60 of 249 documented cases of executions and severe physical violence in 2024 to 2025, including beatings with metal pipes and bone-breaking as punishment for alleged collaboration with Israel or looting aid.
In two instances, 11 men were publicly executed. The Commission said these acts amount to war crimes and violations of international law.
The Commission found that October 7, 2023 attacks on Israel by Hamas and other armed groups, which killed 1,200 people and involved hostage-taking and destruction of property, amounted to war crimes. The attacks precipitated an Israeli assault on Gaza which has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians and destroyed much of the territory.
A previous report by the Commission found that Israel had committed genocide during its military offensive in Gaza, and that senior Israeli officials, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, had incited these acts. Israel rejected those allegations as "scandalous".
(Reporting by Olivia Le PoidevinAdditional reporting by Rami Ayyub in Jerusalem, Nidal al-Mughrabi in Cairo and Ali Sawafta in RamallahEditing by Peter Graff)
UN inquiry finds Israeli forces shield settlers during attacks on Palestinians
By Olivia Le Poidevin
Tue, June 9, 2026
GENEVA, June 9 (Reuters) - Israeli authorities are directly involved in settler attacks that have killed, injured and displaced Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, while Israeli security forces provide protection to settlers, a U.N. inquiry said on Tuesday.
The report by the Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory found that Israeli authorities had enabled settler attacks through financial and military support, in a climate of impunity fostered by judicial and law-enforcement bodies. It also found that the Palestinian militant group Hamas had committed war crimes against both Palestinians and Israelis.
The Israeli prime minister's office and military did not immediately respond to requests for comment, nor did Hamas.
The report said Israeli settler attacks on Palestinian villages and agricultural land had surged since 2023, rising by 130%, including incidents involving groups of masked assailants. Israeli security forces routinely accompanied settlers and acted as a shield for the violence, it said.
Israel rejects charges that its troops shield settlers during attacks on Palestinians in the West Bank, saying such actions are rogue incidents that violate military protocol and are investigated. Israeli and Palestinian rights groups say such investigations rarely lead to punishment.
Hundreds of thousands of Israeli settlers live among millions of Palestinians on land Israel captured in a 1967 war. Most countries consider such settlements a violation of international law, a position upheld in a 2024 ruling by the U.N.'s top court. Israel disputes this, citing historical and biblical ties to the land.
At least seven Palestinians were killed and 832 injured last year, with violence continuing into 2026 in the form of near-daily attacks, according to the United Nations.
"The increasing participation of Israeli security forces in settler attacks amounts to a de facto collapse of the distinction between settlers and soldiers," the report found.
It said such violence has been used to advance state policy, including the unlawful occupation, displacement of Palestinians and the annexation of Palestinian territory.
The commission documented cases of assaults, abductions and abuse of Palestinian children by settlers. In one incident on April 19, 2025, a 12-year-old girl and her 3-year-old brother were abducted at knifepoint, dragged to an olive grove and tied to a tree with plastic restraints until their family intervened.
The Commission also said settlers committed or threatened sexual violence to instil fear and harassed Palestinian women.
"The relentless, daily assaults by Israeli settlers against Palestinians are intolerable — and must end," said the commission's head, S. Muralidhar, an Indian former senior judge. He urged the international community to press Israel to dismantle settlements and outposts and curb the violence.
Despite periodic condemnations and the dismantling of some unauthorized outposts, Israeli authorities have not taken sustained measures to stop the attacks, the report said.
Wassel Abu Yousef, a member of the executive committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization, the body the U.N. recognises as representing Palestinians, told Reuters the report "reflects the extent of the violence perpetrated by settlers against our people". He called for measures such as sanctions in response.
HAMAS VIOLATIONS
The report said it was also gravely alarmed by serious abuses it documented in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip.
The commission found that Hamas-affiliated forces were involved in at least 60 of 249 documented cases of executions and severe physical violence in 2024 to 2025, including beatings with metal pipes and bone-breaking as punishment for alleged collaboration with Israel or looting aid.
In two instances, 11 men were publicly executed. The Commission said these acts amount to war crimes and violations of international law.
The Commission found that October 7, 2023 attacks on Israel by Hamas and other armed groups, which killed 1,200 people and involved hostage-taking and destruction of property, amounted to war crimes. The attacks precipitated an Israeli assault on Gaza which has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians and destroyed much of the territory.
A previous report by the Commission found that Israel had committed genocide during its military offensive in Gaza, and that senior Israeli officials, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, had incited these acts. Israel rejected those allegations as "scandalous".
(Reporting by Olivia Le PoidevinAdditional reporting by Rami Ayyub in Jerusalem, Nidal al-Mughrabi in Cairo and Ali Sawafta in RamallahEditing by Peter Graff)
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