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‘Settlers on all sides’: West Bank bypass raises fears of Israeli annexation

‘Settlers on all sides’: West Bank bypass raises fears of Israeli annexation
A picture taken from E1 corridor, a super-sensitive area of the occupied West Bank, shows cars driving on a highway near the Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim in the background, Apr. 16, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 12 May 2025

‘Settlers on all sides’: West Bank bypass raises fears of Israeli annexation

‘Settlers on all sides’: West Bank bypass raises fears of Israeli annexation
  • Israel has promoted the bypass project as a way to further facilitate settlement expansion in the area near occupied East Jerusalem
  • Illegal settler outposts have spread rapidly across the West Bank since Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu returned to power in late 2022

KHAN Al-AHMAR, Palestinian Territories: A creeping Israeli presence is nothing new for the Bedouins who inhabit the arid hills east of Jerusalem, but a recently approved road in the area means the spectre of annexation now looms large.
Israeli authorities in March green lit the construction of a separate route for Palestinian vehicles to bypass a central stretch of the occupied West Bank — one of the territory’s most disputed parcels of land.
Israel has promoted the project as a way to further facilitate settlement expansion in the area near occupied East Jerusalem.
But Palestinians warn the move threatens to further isolate their communities and undermines hopes for a contiguous future state with East Jerusalem as its capital.
“If they open a road there, that’s it, this area will be annexed,” said Eid Jahaleen, who lives in the Bedouin village of Khan Al-Ahmar.
The village, a cluster of shacks and tents some 10 kilometers from Jerusalem’s Old City, sits surrounded by Israeli settlements.
“It’s going to be hard to reach out to the outside world. No Palestinian services will be allowed to get in here,” he said.
Pro-settler coalition
“If you want clothes, food for your home, (Israel) will be the one to open the gate.”
Israeli settlements are considered illegal under international law.
Outposts — unauthorized structures under Israeli law that often precede the establishment of a settlement — have spread rapidly across the West Bank since Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu returned to power in late 2022, leading a hard-line, pro-settler coalition.
After a new outpost appeared just 100 meters away, Jahaleen said he has “settlers on all sides.”
Israel heavily restricts the movement of West Bank Palestinians, who must obtain permits from authorities to travel through checkpoints to cross into East Jerusalem or Israel.
Far-right ministers have in recent months openly called for Israel’s annexation of the territory.
The alternative bypass would mean Palestinian vehicles driving north-south through the West Bank could travel directly between Palestinian towns rather, without passing the large Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim.
Israel has hailed the move as enabling settlement development between Maale Adumim and Jerusalem on a super-sensitive land corridor known as E1.
Israel has long had ambitions to build on the roughly 12 square kilometers, but the international community has repeatedly warned it could deal a fatal blow to a future Palestinian state.
Maale Adumim’s Mayor Guy Yifrach said the Palestinian bypass would reduce congestion on the current highway between the settlement and Jerusalem and “allow for a natural urban continuity” between the two.
Plans exist to build 4,000 housing units, schools, health clinics and a country club on E1, Yifrach said, but added they had not yet been approved.
Khan al Ahmar, E1 and Maale Adumim all lie within a planned section of Israel’s separation barrier for which construction has been frozen for years.
Israel says the barrier — made up of ditches, roads, razor wire, electronic fences, checkpoints and concrete walls — is necessary to prevent Palestinian attacks.
For Palestinians, the structure further separates them and drastically reduces their freedom of movement.
De facto annexation
Aviv Tatarsky, from the Israeli anti-settlement organization Ir Amim, said that once the road is built, Israel could go ahead with constructing the barrier as planned.
“They want to create this de facto annexation, which means take the space around Maale Adumim and make it an integral part of Jerusalem, of Israel,” he said.
By creating an alternative route for Palestinians to travel through the West Bank, Israel could argue that expanding Jewish settlements in the area would not compromise the contiguity of Palestinian territory, Tatarsky added.
For Mohammad Matter, from the Palestinian Authority’s Wall and Settlement Resistance Commission, the road “has nothing to do with making life easier for Palestinians.”
The bypass will trace the northern edge of Matter’s village of Al Eizariya, and he fears it will further squeeze Palestinians into isolated enclaves, connected only through transport corridors.
“They (Israel) are realizing their vision: Israelis walk up high and Palestinians walk through valleys or tunnels,” he said.


Brazil’s Lula: ‘Absolutely nothing justifies the ongoing genocide in Gaza’

Brazil’s Lula: ‘Absolutely nothing justifies the ongoing genocide in Gaza’
Updated 19 sec ago

Brazil’s Lula: ‘Absolutely nothing justifies the ongoing genocide in Gaza’

Brazil’s Lula: ‘Absolutely nothing justifies the ongoing genocide in Gaza’
  • ‘The myth of the ethical superiority of the West’ is buried in besieged enclave, president tells UN
  • ‘The spread of this conflict to Lebanon, Syria, Iran and Qatar is fueling an unprecedented arms buildup’

NEW YORK: The greatest worldwide example of “disproportionate and illegal use of force” is in Gaza, Brazilian President Lula da Silva told the UN General Assembly on Tuesday, accusing Israel of “genocide.”

Though he condemned the Hamas attack on Israel of Oct. 7, 2023, as “indefensible from any angle,” he added: “Nothing, absolutely nothing, justifies the ongoing genocide in Gaza.”

Beneath the rubble in the besieged enclave, there are “buried tens of thousands of innocent women and children,” Lula said.

“International humanitarian law and the myth of the ethical superiority of the West are also buried there,” he added.

“This massacre wouldn’t have happened without the complicity of those who could’ve prevented it.”

He accused Israel of using hunger as a weapon of war through the denial of humanitarian aid to Gaza, as well as forcibly displacing Palestinians “with impunity.”

He added: “I express my admiration to the Jews who, inside and outside Israel, oppose this collective punishment.”

Lula warned that the Palestinian people “are at risk of disappearing,” and could only be protected through an independent state that is integrated into the international community.

“This is the solution advocated by more than 150 UN members, reaffirmed yesterday, here in this very plenary, but obstructed by a single (US) veto,” he added.

Lula also condemned the US for blocking the Palestinian delegation to the UNGA, adding that it is “regrettable” that President Mahmoud Abbas was prevented from occupying the Palestinian seat “at this historic moment.”

Lula warned that Israel’s war in Gaza is risking regional security, adding: “The spread of this conflict to Lebanon, Syria, Iran and Qatar is fueling an unprecedented arms buildup.”


Algeria buys milling wheat in tender, traders say

Algeria buys milling wheat in tender, traders say
Updated 22 min 48 sec ago

Algeria buys milling wheat in tender, traders say

Algeria buys milling wheat in tender, traders say
  • The size of the purchase in tonnage terms was not initially clear
  • The wheat was sought for shipment in two periods from the main supply regions

HAMBURG/PARIS: Algeria’s state grains agency OAIC has bought milling wheat in an international tender which closed on Tuesday, European traders said.
Purchases were initially reported at around $259 to $260 a metric ton cost and freight (c&f) included, they said.
The size of the purchase in tonnage terms was not initially clear.
Reports reflect assessments from traders and further estimates of prices and volumes are still expected later.
The wheat was sought for shipment in two periods from the main supply regions including Europe: November 1-15 and November 16-30. If sourced from South America or Australia, shipment is one month earlier.


UN chief calls for enforcement of ICJ Gaza genocide case ruling, end to ‘monstrous’ war

UN chief calls for enforcement of ICJ Gaza genocide case ruling, end to ‘monstrous’ war
Updated 23 September 2025

UN chief calls for enforcement of ICJ Gaza genocide case ruling, end to ‘monstrous’ war

UN chief calls for enforcement of ICJ Gaza genocide case ruling, end to ‘monstrous’ war
  • Antonio Guterres: ‘Nothing can justify the collective punishment of the Palestinian people’
  • ‘The scale of death and destruction are beyond any other conflict in my years as secretary-general’

NEW YORK: The UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres on Tuesday urged the immediate implementation of binding measures issued by the International Court of Justice in the Gaza genocide case, warning that the humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian enclave has deepened since the ruling and that the war is entering “a third monstrous year.”

Antonio Guterres told world leaders gathered at the opening of the high-level debate at the 80th session of the UN General Assembly in New York: “The measures stipulated by the ICJ must be implemented, fully and immediately.”

The ICJ, the UN’s top legal body, issued provisional measures earlier this year in response to a case brought against Israel under the Genocide Convention.

They require Israel to take all measures to prevent genocide and incitement to genocide, cease military operations, ensure unimpeded humanitarian aid to Gaza, and facilitate UN-mandated investigations into alleged genocidal acts. The court emphasized that these orders create international legal obligations for Israel.

Since that ruling, Guterres said, a famine has been declared in Gaza and violence has intensified, with civilians bearing the brunt of the continued military offensive.

“The scale of death and destruction are beyond any other conflict in my years as secretary-general,” he said.

Guterres again unequivocally condemned the Hamas attack on Israel of Oct. 7, 2023, but stressed that no justification exists for the “collective punishment of the Palestinian people and the systematic destruction of Gaza.”

He added: “Nothing can justify the horrific Hamas terror attacks of Oct. 7 and the taking of hostages, both of which I have repeatedly condemned. And nothing can justify the collective punishment of the Palestinian people.”

Guterres called for an urgent permanent ceasefire, the release of all hostages and full humanitarian access to the Gaza Strip, which has faced near-total blockade and extensive bombardment since the war began nearly two years ago.

He also reiterated that the only long-term solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict lies in the creation of a viable, independent Palestinian state alongside Israel.

“We must not relent in the only viable answer to sustainable Middle East peace: a two-state solution,” Guterres said. “Relentless settler expansion and violence, and the looming threat of annexation, must stop.”

His remarks came amid mounting international criticism of both the scale of Israel’s military campaign and the failure of diplomatic efforts to end the conflict.

Last week, the UN Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory and Israel concluded that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza.

The investigators warned member states that silence in the face of genocide amounts to complicity, urging them to fulfill their obligations under the Genocide Convention and take every measure they can to halt it.

Independent humanitarian access and journalistic reporting remain heavily restricted in the enclave.

“We know what is needed,” Guterres told the UNGA. “Permanent ceasefire now. All the hostages released now. Full humanitarian access now.”

He warned that the world is at a crossroads between “cooperation or collapse,” amid multiple global crises, from war to climate change, and growing disregard for international law.

Guterres also highlighted the crisis in Sudan, where a civil war has caused massive civilian suffering and regional destabilization.

“In Sudan, civilians are being slaughtered, starved and silenced. Women and girls face unspeakable violence,” he said, warning that there is no military solution to the conflict.

“I urge all parties, including those in this hall: End the external support that’s fueling this bloodshed. Push to protect civilians. The Sudanese people deserve peace, dignity and hope,” he added.

Sudan’s war, which erupted in April 2023, has displaced millions and created one of the world’s worst hunger crises, with famine declared by UN in large areas.


Hundreds of Israeli settlers storm Al-Aqsa Mosque on Jewish New Year

Hundreds of Israeli settlers storm Al-Aqsa Mosque on Jewish New Year
Updated 23 September 2025

Hundreds of Israeli settlers storm Al-Aqsa Mosque on Jewish New Year

Hundreds of Israeli settlers storm Al-Aqsa Mosque on Jewish New Year
  • Former Knesset member Yehuda Glick entered the site wearing traditional Torah attire, accompanying the settlers
  • ‘These incursions are part of the (Israeli) occupation’s efforts to obliterate the Islamic and historical identity of Jerusalem,’ the Waqf Department said

LONDON: Hundreds of Israeli settlers stormed the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in occupied East Jerusalem on Tuesday, as part of Jewish New Year celebrations, which continue until Wednesday, the Waqf Department reported.

Former Knesset member Rabbi Yehuda Glick entered the site wearing traditional Torah attire, accompanying settlers who sang religious songs, performed Talmudic and Torah rituals, and engaged in group clapping and dancing in the courtyards of Al-Aqsa, the Wafa news agency reported.

Israeli authorities enforced strict entry restrictions on Palestinians on Tuesday morning, checking their IDs and confiscating some at the Al-Aqsa gates as settlers toured the site. The Jewish New Year has increased tensions amid heightened Israeli security and movement restrictions for Palestinians in the Old City of Jerusalem, Wafa reported.

“These incursions are part of the (Israeli) occupation’s efforts to obliterate the Islamic and historical identity of Jerusalem and threaten Islamic sovereignty over Al-Aqsa Mosque,” the Waqf Department said.

Waqf said Israeli settlers are attempting to impose temporal and spatial divisions in Al-Aqsa compound, exacerbating tensions in Jerusalem.

Since 1967, the Jerusalem Endowments Council, known also as the Waqf, which operates under Jordan’s Ministry of Endowments and Islamic Affairs, is the legal authority responsible for managing and regulating the affairs of Al-Aqsa.

However, this status quo has been challenged in recent years by extremist settlers who regularly tour the site under the protection of Israeli police and are often accompanied by government officials and far-right ministers and activists.


Turkish authorities detain 13 in latest probe targeting opposition-run municipalities

Turkish authorities detain 13 in latest probe targeting opposition-run municipalities
Updated 23 September 2025

Turkish authorities detain 13 in latest probe targeting opposition-run municipalities

Turkish authorities detain 13 in latest probe targeting opposition-run municipalities
  • Suspects were taken into custody on charges of abuse of public office and rigging of public tenders
  • The investigation centers on 32 concerts held between 2021 and 2024

ANKARA: Turkish authorities on Tuesday detained 13 people as part of a corruption investigation into concerts organized by the Ankara Metropolitan Municipality — the latest legal action targeting municipalities run by Turkiye’s main opposition party.
A statement from the Ankara Chief Prosecutor’s Office said the suspects, including former municipal employees and owners of private event companies, were taken into custody on charges of abuse of public office and rigging of public tenders.
The investigation centers on 32 concerts held between 2021 and 2024, which allegedly resulted in 154.4 million Turkish lira ($3.7 million) of financial losses, according to reports by the Interior Ministry, Turkiye’s Financial Crimes Investigation Board, and the Court of Accounts, the statement said.
Municipalities led by the opposition Republican People’s Party, or CHP, have faced a series of corruption probes this year, including the most high-profile one of Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu. Regarded as president Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s main rival, Imamoglu was arrested and detained in March, triggering widespread protests.
The CHP has rejected the allegations, describing the legal actions as politically motivated efforts by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan ‘s government to undermine the opposition through judicial means.
The government insists that Turkiye’s judiciary operates independently, and that the investigations are solely focused on uncovering corruption.
The CHP achieved sweeping victories in last year’s local elections, holding onto major cities like Istanbul and Ankara, while also making significant advances in regions traditionally dominated by Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party.