URIF: A rusty barbed wire fence towers above the students entering Urif high school in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, where spiralling violence since October 7 has struck fear into Palestinians.
“We tell the students ... to come to school together and not on their own, because we do not know when their (settlers) attack will be,” said Mazin Shehadeh, vice-principal for the high school located in a village south of the city of Nablus.
On the hill above the village sits the Israeli settlement of Yitzhar, from where Palestinians say settlers descend to attack them.
“Every day when we arrive, we inspect the area around the school for fear that there might be explosive devices,” said the educator, whose office floor was charred black by what he said was an arson attack.
Israel has occupied the West Bank since 1967 and now some 490,000 Israelis live across the Palestinian territory in settlements that are considered illegal under international law.
Palestinians have long faced harassment by settlers.
Recalling an attack on the school, one 15-year-old student said, “We were in class, and the settlers attacked us from the back of the school. They threw stones at the windows.”
“The (Israeli) soldiers were standing above, near the water tank, firing tear gas and stun grenades toward the school.”
Now the pupils fear an attack at any moment.
“At the slightest noise, at the slightest gunshot or at the slightest explosion near the town, we say to ourselves that the (Israeli) army or the settlers have attacked the school,” said Qais.
Since October 7, 519 Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank by Israeli soldiers or settlers, according to the health ministry in Ramallah.
More checkpoints and other Israeli military installations have been erected since the start of the war, complicating the journey to school.
“Sometimes the army harasses us, sends us tear gas bombs and sound bombs and prevents us from going to school,” said a 12-year-old student.
The school year, which ended on Wednesday, turned into “a nightmare” for Palestinian students, the United Nation’s children’s agency UNICEF has said.
Some 27.5 percent of elementary school students do not feel safe at school, according to a study by UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees.
Between October 7 and May 7, 60 children were killed in the West Bank, 345 injured and 68 schools targeted by acts of vandalism, according to the Palestinian education ministry.
It said another 125 students have been detained by the Israeli military, who when asked by AFP about the arrests said they were part of their “counter-terrorism activities“
Last week, a 15-year-old boy was shot dead while evacuating from his school by bicycle during an Israeli military raid in the northern West Bank city of Jenin.
Even before the war, violence between communities in the West Bank near the school reached a record high.
In June 2023 two residents of Urif village, members of the armed group Hamas, killed four Israelis in an attack to the south.
In response, dozens of masked settlers could be seen in footage reviewed by AFP setting fire to a school and trees, and throwing stones at homes in the village.
In response to repeated attacks by settlers, school administrators in Urif said they had spent the equivalent of 62,500 euros on a tarpaulin to catch thrown stones and they have also installed barbed wire.
In the classrooms, thick purple curtains are drawn over barred windows, and staff run regular evacuation drills.
The violence and consequent fortifications have made students feel like they are trapped and “entering a prison,” said Shehadeh.
The school has had many of its “most hardworking and brilliant students” drop out, he added.
Others have left to help their parents, who have been without an income since Israel placed increased restrictions on Palestinians working in Israel.
Those pupils who remain only attend in-person classes three days a week and do the rest remotely due to the security concerns and the Palestinian Authority not paying teachers their full salaries.
However, not all students have the electronic devices or Internet connections needed to learn remotely, said Refat Sabbah, founder of the Teacher Creativity Center, a charity.
“In such a context, when students feel at risk at every moment, how can they learn? The psychological impact is huge on the students and the teachers,” he added.
UN expert says Israel ‘genocide’ seeks ‘eradication’ of Palestinians from their land
- UN rights expert Francesca Albanese: ‘Genocide of the Palestinians appears to be the means to an end’
- Independent expert on rights in the occupied Palestinian territories has long faced harsh Israeli criticism
The independent expert on rights in the occupied Palestinian territories, who has long faced harsh Israeli criticism, said in a fresh report that “the genocide of the Palestinians appears to be the means to an end: the complete removal or eradication of Palestinians from the land so integral to their identity, and which is illegally and openly coveted by Israel.”
Iran moves to triple military budget amid Israel tensions
- Tehran has not disclosed any figures
- The proposed budget will be debated, with lawmakers expected to finalize it in March
TEHRAN: Iran’s government has proposed to triple its military budget, its spokeswoman said Tuesday, as tensions with arch-rival Israel rise following recent tit-for-tat missile strikes.
Government spokeswoman Fatemeh MoHajjerani outlined the move that would see “a significant increase of more than 200 percent in the country’s military budget” at a news conference in Tehran.
She did not elaborate and Tehran has not disclosed any figures, but according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute think tank, Iran’s military spending in 2023 was about $10.3 billion.
The proposed budget will be debated, with lawmakers expected to finalize it in March.
Iran and Israel on Monday accused each other of endangering Middle East peace in a heated exchange at a UN meeting.
It came days after Israel carried out strikes on Iran in response to an October 1 missile barrage that the Islamic republic launched against Israel.
The Iranian army reported four soldiers killed and damage to “radar systems.”
Iran’s October 1 strike, involving 200 missiles, was in retaliation for attacks that killed the leaders of the Iran-backed groups Hamas and Hezbollah, as well as one of its own commanders.
“All efforts have been made to meet the country’s defense needs and special attention has been paid to this issue,” the government spokeswoman MoHajjerani said.
The regional tensions flared after Israel launched a military offensive in the Gaza Strip to eliminate the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas in response to the unprecedented October 7, 2023 attacks on Israel.
Since last month, Israel has also been battling Lebanon’s Hezbollah movement.
Sexual violence on ‘staggering’ scale in Sudan civil war: UN probe
- Children are not spared the abuse, while women and girls are being abducted for sexual slavery
- War between the Sudanese army and paramilitary forces has triggered one of the worst humanitarian crises
GENEVA: Rape is widespread in Sudan’s civil war, a United Nations investigation said Tuesday, accusing paramilitaries especially of committing sexual violence on a “staggering” scale.
Children are not spared the abuse, while women and girls are being abducted for sexual slavery, the UN Independent International Fact-Finding Mission for the Sudan said in a new report.
“There is no safe place in Sudan now,” the investigation’s chair Mohamed Chande Othman said in a statement.
War has raged since April 2023 between the Sudanese army (SAF) under the country’s de facto ruler Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), led by his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo.
The civil war has triggered one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.
UN chief Antonio Guterres said Monday that Sudan was enduring a “nightmare” of hunger, violence, illness and “unspeakable atrocities.”
The fact-finding mission said Tuesday the war had resulted in thousands of killings, injuries, extensive displacement and the destruction of homes, schools and hospitals.
“The situation remains grim as the conflict rages on, causing civilians immense suffering,” it said.
About 11.3 million people have been uprooted from their homes by the war, among them nearly three million who have fled outside Sudan, according to the UN refugee agency.
More than 25 million people — more than half the population — are facing acute hunger.
The SAF, the RSF and their allied militias “have committed large-scale human rights and international humanitarian law violations, many of which may amount to war crimes and/or crimes against humanity,” the mission concluded.
Both sides have arrested and detained people arbitrarily, and have engaged in torture amounting to war crimes.
“Both obstructed access to humanitarian aid for civilians in need,” the mission said.
The report accused both sides of sexual violence, but said the RSF was behind the “large majority” of documented cases.
The mission said the RSF was responsible for “sexual violence on a large scale,” including “gang-rapes and abducting and detaining victims in conditions that amount to sexual slavery.”
It also said the RSF and its allies had committed a range of other war crimes and crimes against humanity, including “abduction, and recruitment and use of children in hostilities,” amid systematic looting and pillaging.
“The sheer scale of sexual violence we have documented in Sudan is staggering,” said Othman, a former chief justice of Tanzania.
“The situation faced by vulnerable civilians, in particular women and girls of all ages, is deeply alarming and needs urgent address.”
Such abuses were “part of a pattern aimed at terrorizing and punishing civilians for perceived links with opponents,” and suppressing any opposition to their military advances.
In the western Darfur region, sexual violence was committed “with particular cruelty, with firearms, knives and whips.”
The report said: “First-hand sources informed of rape of girls as young as eight years and women as old as 75.”
Victims were often subjected to “punching, beatings with sticks and lashing, before and during the rape,” with sexual violence often occurring in the presence of the victims’ relatives.
The mission said they had received credible information “about rape and gang-rape of men and boys.”
Chaired by Othman, the three-member mission was established in October 2023 by the UN Human Rights Council, charged with probing all alleged human rights and international humanitarian law violations in the conflict.
Tuesday’s 80-page report expands on the mission’s first report to the rights council, delivered in September.
The mission called for an immediate and sustainable ceasefire.
They repeated their call for the deployment of an independent force with a mandate to protect civilians.
The mission also said the arms embargo on Darfur, and the International Criminal Court’s jurisdiction over the region, should be extended to the whole country, while former president Omar Al-Bashir should be surrendered to the ICC.
Gazan family seeks shelter from war among graves
- Most of two million people in Gaza have been displaced by Israel’s relentless assault on the strip
KHAN YOUNIS: After more than a year of war, Abu Razzak Al-Qassas and his family live in a makeshift shelter within a cemetery in the southern Gaza Strip, dependent on food donations for survival. The Al-Qassas family, originally from Gaza City in the northern part of the coastal enclave, are among many other displaced that are staying in the Khan Younis cemetery.
“Look at how terrifying and frightening it is for the children. Look at how we are living, there is no food and water,” Al-Qassas said, pointing to the cemetery’s gravestones.
Most of two million people in Gaza have been displaced by Israel’s relentless assault on the strip. Some, like the Al-Qassas family, whose home was severely damaged, have had to move more than once.
The amount of aid entering Gaza has plummeted and there are severe shortages of food, water, medicine and fuel. Israel has often blamed aid agencies for failing to distribute aid inside Gaza. The US has warned its ally Israel to improve the humanitarian situation in Gaza or face potential restrictions on US military aid.
Hunger is prevalent and many people are living in tents and makeshift shelters of tattered tarps and blankets that are unlikely to protect them from the harsh winter they are about to face.
The Al-Qassas family live off bread that is warmed by an open fire, cheese and a mixture of spices and wheat.
“My children have nothing to eat or drink. They cry all night long. They want food. Where can I get it from?,” Al-Qassas said, adding that the markets and border crossings were closed.
The war was triggered when militants from the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people and taking another 250 into Gaza as hostages, according to Israeli tallies.
Vowing to destroy Hamas and free the hostages, Israel’s retaliatory assault on Gaza has killed more than 43,000 people, health officials say.
Repeated international efforts to end the war have failed.
“There is no life anymore in the entire Gaza Strip, whether in the north or in the south,” said Al-Qassas’ wife, Ghada.
Iraqis returning from Syria face torture: Amnesty
- Iraq and the United Nations had agreed to repatriate tens of thousands of Iraqis from Syria’s Al-Hol camp
- Iraq is one of the few countries to regularly repatriate its nationals from Al-Hol
BAGHDAD: Amnesty International on Tuesday alleged cases of “torture and ill-treatment” among Iraqis who returned home from Syria to a rehabilitation center for people suspected of Daesh group ties.
The London-based human rights group said it documented cases involving seven men and one woman, detained over the past two years at the Al-Jadaa camp in northern Iraq.
“Seven of them faced torture and ill-treatment,” Amnesty said, describing beatings, electric shocks and suffocation by plastic bags.
Family members observed signs of torture, including broken fingers and dislocated shoulders, the group said in a statement.
“The torture and other ill-treatment suffered by those arrested... is horrifying. It must be stopped and investigated immediately,” said Amnesty secretary general Agnes Callamard.
Iraq and the United Nations had agreed to repatriate tens of thousands of Iraqis from Syria’s Al-Hol camp, but Callamard called it “unconscionable” that those returning from war and detention face further horrors.”
Amnesty said it spoke with detainees, their families and 16 UN staff members during interviews conducted between July and September.
Of the eight cases, seven detainees described torture by Iraqi security forces. Six are now serving lengthy sentences based on forced confessions, it said.
One detainee, identified by the pseudonym Saleem, described his experience.
“They beat me, and... handcuffed my hands behind my back. They hit the soles of my feet with a green water pipe... I was just saying ‘no’, again and again,” he was quoted as saying by Amnesty.
“During the torture, they said they wanted me to confess to things I didn’t do. I didn’t confess, and so I didn’t walk for four days.”
Amnesty urged Iraqi authorities to “immediately end the use of torture and other ill-treatment and the enforced disappearance of those arrested” at Al-Jadaa.
The non-governmental organization said it had requested but was denied access to interview detainees in July due to “security concerns.”
On October 2, Amnesty said it wrote to Iraq’s prime minister with its findings but has not received a response.
Iraq is one of the few countries to regularly repatriate its nationals from Al-Hol, a policy welcomed by the United Nations and the United States.
Since 2021, Iraqi forces have arrested about 80 people in the camp on charges of affiliation with the Daesh group, Amnesty said.
While some arrests may be “legitimate,” Amnesty noted accusations have occasionally stemmed from personal quarrels or a relative with ties to Daesh.
As of September, Al-Jadaa held 2,223 people, including 1,318 children, 627 women and 278 men, the rights group said.