Israel’s Bedouin communities use solar energy to stake claim to land

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Updated 10 July 2025
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Israel’s Bedouin communities use solar energy to stake claim to land

Israel’s Bedouin communities use solar energy to stake claim to land
  • Bedouin families have for years tried and failed to hold on to their lands, coming up against right-wing groups and hard-line government officials
  • For the solar panels to be built, the land must be registered as part of the Bedouin village, strengthening their claim over it

TIRABIN-AL-SANA, Israel: At the end of a dusty road in southern Israel, beyond a Bedouin village of unfinished houses and the shiny dome of a mosque, a field of solar panels gleams in the hot desert sun.

Tirabin Al-Sana in Israel’s Negev desert is the home of the Tirabin (also spelled Tarabin) Bedouin tribe, who signed a contract with an Israeli solar energy company to build the installation.

The deal has helped provide jobs for the community as well as promote cleaner, cheaper energy for the country, as the power produced is pumped into the national grid.

Earlier this month, the Al-Ghanami family in the town of Abu Krinat a little further south inaugurated a similar field of solar panels.




Children play beneath a scaffolding holding photovoltaic solar panels in the yard of a kindergarten in the recognized but unplanned Bedouin village of Umm Batin near Beersheva in Israel's southern Negev Desert on June 11, 2025. (AFP)

Bedouin families have for years tried and failed to hold on to their lands, coming up against right-wing groups and hard-line government officials.

Demolition orders issued by Israeli authorities plague Bedouin villages, threatening the traditionally semi-nomadic communities with forced eviction.

But Yosef Abramowitz, co-chair of the non-profit organization Shamsuna, said solar field projects help them to stake a more definitive claim.

“It secures their land rights forever,” he told AFP.

“It’s the only way to settle the Bedouin land issue and secure 100 percent renewable energy,” he added, calling it a “win, win.”

For the solar panels to be built, the land must be registered as part of the Bedouin village, strengthening their claim over it.

Rise in home demolitions

Roughly 300,000 Bedouins live in the Negev desert, half of them in places such as Tirabin Al-Sana, including some 110,000 who reside in villages not officially recognized by the government.

Villages that are not formally recognized are fighting the biggest battle to stay on the land.

Far-right groups, some backed by the current government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, have stepped up efforts in the past two years to drive these families away.




This aerial view shows solar panels at an electricity-generation plant for the Bedouin community in the village of Tirabin al-Sana in Israel's southern Negev Desert on June 11, 2025. (AFP)
 

A sharp increase in home demolitions has left the communities vulnerable and whole families without a roof over their heads.

“Since 2023, more than 8,500 buildings have been demolished in these unrecognized villages,” Marwan Abu Frieh, from the legal aid organization Adalah, told AFP at a recent protest in Beersheva, the largest city in the Negev.

“Within these villages, thousands of families are now living out in the open, an escalation the Negev has not witnessed in perhaps the last two decades.”

Tribes just want to “live in peace and dignity,” following their distinct customs and traditions, he said.

Gil Yasur, who also works with Shamsuna developing critical infrastructure in Bedouin villages, said land claims issues were common among Bedouins across the Negev.

Families who include a solar project on their land, however, stand a better chance of securing it, he added.

“Then everyone will benefit — the landowners, the country, the Negev,” he said. “This is the best way to move forward to a green economy.”

Fully solar-energized

In Um Batin, a recognized village, residents are using solar energy in a different way — to power a local kindergarten all year round.

Until last year, the village relied on power from a diesel generator that polluted the air and the ground where the children played.

Now, a hulking solar panel shields the children from the sun as its surface sucks up the powerful rays, keeping the kindergarten in full working order.

“It was not clean or comfortable here before,” said Nama Abu Kaf, who works in the kindergarten.

“Now we have air conditioning and a projector so the children can watch television.”

Hani Al-Hawashleh, who oversees the project on behalf of Shamsuna, said the solar energy initiative for schools and kindergartens was “very positive.”

“Without power you can’t use all kinds of equipment such as projectors, lights in the classrooms and, on the other hand, it saves costs and uses clean energy,” he said.

The projects are part of a pilot scheme run by Shamsuna.

Asked if there was interest in expanding to other educational institutions that rely on polluting generators, he said there were challenges and bureaucracy but he hoped to see more.


Turkiye’s Erdogan to Merz: does Germany not see Israeli genocide in Gaza?

Turkiye’s Erdogan to Merz: does Germany not see Israeli genocide in Gaza?
Updated 37 min 25 sec ago
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Turkiye’s Erdogan to Merz: does Germany not see Israeli genocide in Gaza?

Turkiye’s Erdogan to Merz: does Germany not see Israeli genocide in Gaza?
  • Erdogan said Israel had nuclear and other weapons with which it was using and threatening Gaza
  • “Does Germany not see these?” he said

ANKARA: Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan slammed Germany over what he said was its ignorance of Israel’s “genocide,” famine and attacks in Gaza, at a joint news conference with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz in Ankara on Thursday.

Erdogan said Israel had nuclear and other weapons with which it was using and threatening Gaza, adding Palestinian militant group Hamas had none of those. He said Israel had once again attacked Gaza in recent days despite a ceasefire in the enclave.

“Does Germany not see these?” he said, adding it was Turkiye, Germany and other countries’ humanitarian duty to end the famine and massacres in Gaza.

Asked about the jailing of Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, Erdogan said that nobody can trample on laws regardless of their position, and added that the judiciary is managing the legal process as needed.

Imamoglu has been in prison since March pending trial on corruption charges that he and his main opposition party deny.


Israeli strikes pound Gaza, Hamas to hand over more dead hostages

Israeli strikes pound Gaza, Hamas to hand over more dead hostages
Updated 45 min 12 sec ago
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Israeli strikes pound Gaza, Hamas to hand over more dead hostages

Israeli strikes pound Gaza, Hamas to hand over more dead hostages
  • Planes bomb areas east of Khan Younis Thursday while tanks shell near Gaza City
  • Health officials say 46 children killed by Israeli attacks on previous days

CAIRO/GAZA: Israeli planes and tanks pounded areas in eastern Gaza on Thursday, Palestinian residents and witnesses said, a day after Israel said it remained committed to a US-backed ceasefire despite launching more lethal bombardments in the territory.

Witnesses said Israeli planes carried out 10 airstrikes in areas east of Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, while tanks shelled areas east of Gaza City in the north. No injuries or deaths were reported.

The Israeli military said it carried out “precise” strikes against “terrorist infrastructure that posed a threat to the troops” in the areas, which Israel still occupies.

The strikes were the latest test of the fragile ceasefire that came into effect on October 10 in the conflict between Israel and Hamas.

“We’re scared that another war will break out, because we don’t want a war. We’ve suffered two years of displacement. We don’t know where to go or where to come,” said a displaced man, Fathi Al-Najjar, in Khan Younis in southern Gaza.

At the tent encampment where Najjar spoke, girls and boys were filling plastic bottles with water from metal containers placed on the side of the street, and women cooked food for their families using clay-made firewood ovens.

Return of deceased hostages

Under the ceasefire accord, Hamas released all living hostages in return for nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and wartime detainees, while Israel pulled back its troops and agreed to halt its offensive.

Hamas also agreed to hand over the remains of all 28 dead hostages. It has returned 15 bodies, arguing that it will take time to locate and retrieve all of them.

Smoke billowing during an Israeli strike on Gaza Thursday. (AFP)

The militant group’s armed wing announced on Thursday that it would hand over two more bodies of hostages at 4 p.m. local time (1400 GMT).

The recovery and handover of bodies of hostages in Gaza has been one of the obstacles to US President Donald Trump’s Gaza plan, with Israel claiming that Hamas has been delaying the handover, an accusation Hamas denies.

From Tuesday into Wednesday, Israel retaliated for the death of an Israeli soldier with bombardments that Gaza health authorities said killed 104 people.

Witnesses in Gaza said they did not see strikes on Thursday outside of the area Israel controls.

Women and children killed

Israel says the soldier was killed in an attack by gunmen on territory within the so-called “yellow line” to which its troops withdrew under the ceasefire. Hamas has rejected the accusation.

The Israeli military issued a list of 26 militants it said it had targeted during the bombardment earlier this week, including one it said was a Hamas commander who participated in the October 7, 2023 assault on Israel that ignited the war.

The Hamas-run Gaza government media office said Israel’s list was part of a “systematic campaign of misinformation” to cover up “crimes against civilians in Gaza.”

The Gaza health ministry said 46 children and 20 women were among the 104 people killed in the airstrikes.

Sources close to international efforts to sustain the ceasefire said US and regional mediators swiftly intervened to restore calm as Israel and Hamas traded blame.

Strikes raise doubts in Gaza

People in the Gaza Strip, most of which had been reduced to wasteland, feared the tenuous truce would fall apart, saying that the last two days, in which they were deprived of sleep, felt like a revival of the two-year war.

“The situation is extremely difficult. The war is still ongoing, and we have no hope that it will end, because of the conditions we are witnessing in the life we are living,” said Mohammed Al-Sheikh.

The war has displaced most of Gaza’s more than two million people, some of them several times. Many haven’t yet returned to their areas, fearing they could soon be displaced once again.

Gaza health authorities say 68,000 people are confirmed killed in the Israeli campaign and thousands more are missing. Israel launched the war after Hamas-led fighters attacked southern Israel, killing 1,200 people and bringing 251 hostages back to Gaza, according to Israeli tallies.


Thousands of ultra-Orthodox Jews protest Israeli military service

Thousands of ultra-Orthodox Jews protest Israeli military service
Updated 30 October 2025
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Thousands of ultra-Orthodox Jews protest Israeli military service

Thousands of ultra-Orthodox Jews protest Israeli military service
  • The vast crowd were protesting against the absence of a law guaranteeing their right
  • Carrying placards denouncing conscription, demonstrators marched along main roads leading into Jerusalem

JERUSALEM: Thousands of ultra-Orthodox Jewish men, dressed in black, rallied in Jerusalem on Thursday to protest against military conscription, an issue that has caused major strain in Israel’s right-wing ruling coalition.

The vast crowd were protesting against the absence of a law guaranteeing their right to avoid Israel’s mandatory military service — a pledge long promised by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Crowds of men, many wearing black hats, set fire to pieces of tarpaulin as hundreds of police officers cordoned off several roads across the city, AFP correspondents reported.

Carrying placards denouncing conscription, demonstrators marched along main roads leading into Jerusalem.

The mass demonstration follows a recent crackdown on ultra-Orthodox draft dodgers, with thousands of call-up notices sent in recent months and several deserters imprisoned.

Under a ruling established at the time of Israel’s creation in 1948, when the ultra-Orthodox were a very small community, men who devote themselves full-time to the study of sacred Jewish texts are given a de facto pass.

This exemption has come under mounting pressure since war erupted in Gaza in October 2023, as the military struggles to fill its ranks.

Whether the exemption should be scrapped has been a long-running point of contention in Israeli society, with Netanyahu pledging that his government would pass a law enshrining the waiver.

But he has so far failed to deliver.

Responding to the call of two ultra-Orthodox parties — one of which forms a key part of the ruling coalition — men traveled from all over Israel on Thursday to demand the continuation of their exemptions.

The police closed roads to Jerusalem and announced the mobilization of 2,000 officers in the city.

In June 2024, the supreme court ruled that the state must draft ultra-Orthodox men, declaring their exemption had expired.

- Vital support for coalition -

A parliamentary committee is now discussing a bill expected to end the exemptions and encourage young ultra-Orthodox men who are not studying full-time to enlist.

The issue has placed Netanyahu’s coalition — one of the most right-wing in the country’s history — under severe strain.

In July, ministers from the ultra-Orthodox Shas party resigned from the cabinet over the issue, though the party has not formally left the coalition.

The other ultra-Orthodox party, United Torah Judaism, has already quit both the government and the coalition.

The Sephardic Shas, which holds 11 seats in the 120-member Knesset, has warned that it will withdraw support unless military service exemptions are anchored in law --- move that could topple Netanyahu’s fragile coalition, now down to 60 seats.

Some ultra-Orthodox rabbis fear that conscription will make young people less religious, but others accept that those who do not study holy texts full-time can enlist.

Ultra-Orthodox Jews make up 14 percent of Israel’s Jewish population, or about 1.3 million people, and roughly 66,000 men of military age currently benefit from the exemption.

According to an army report presented to parliament in September, there has been a sharp increase in the number of ultra-Orthodox Jews enlisting despite opposition from their leaders, but the numbers still remain low, at a few hundred over the past two years.


Dead bodies in the streets: Survivors describe fleeing Sudan’s El-Fasher

Dead bodies in the streets: Survivors describe fleeing Sudan’s El-Fasher
Updated 30 October 2025
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Dead bodies in the streets: Survivors describe fleeing Sudan’s El-Fasher

Dead bodies in the streets: Survivors describe fleeing Sudan’s El-Fasher
  • More than 36,000 civilians have fled the city since Sunday, when the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) captured the army’s last stronghold in the Darfur region

PORT SUDAN: Families hid in trenches, bodies lay in the streets and children were killed in front of their parents as Sudanese paramilitaries advanced into the western city of El-Fasher, survivors told AFP.

More than 36,000 civilians have fled the city since Sunday, when the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) captured the army’s last stronghold in the Darfur region, triggering warnings from the UN and humanitarian groups of possible mass killings and ethnic cleansing.

Some have sought refuge in Tawila, a town around 70 kilometers (43 miles) to the west that is already sheltering some 650,000 displaced people.

In satellite phone interviews with AFP, three survivors who reached Tawila described scenes of terror and loss during their escape from a city besieged by the RSF for 18 months, cut off from food, medicine and other aid.

Their accounts echoed those of survivors of the mass killings in Darfur in the early 2000s, when Janjaweed militias — the forces accused of genocide there which later became the RSF — burned villages, killed some 300,000 people and displaced 2.7 million more.

Emtithal Mahmoud, a survivor of the earlier Darfur killings now based in the United States, recounted to AFP a harrowing moment when she recognized her cousin, Nadifa, in a video shared by RSF accounts, lying dead on the ground.

The survivors’ full names have been withheld for their safety.

- Hayat, mother of five: ‘They killed my 16-year-old son’ -

“On Saturday at 6 am, the shelling was extremely heavy. I took my children and hid with them in a trench. We haven’t heard from my husband for six months.

“After about an hour, seven RSF fighters entered our house. They took my phone, searched even my undergarments, and killed my 16-year-old son. We fled with many people from our neighborhood.

“On the road between El-Fasher and Garni (a village northwest of the city), we saw many dead bodies lying on the ground and wounded people left behind in the open because their families couldn’t carry them. Along the way, we were robbed again and the young men traveling with us were stopped. We don’t know what happened to them.”

- Hussein, survivor wounded by shelling: ‘Bodies in the streets’ -

“We left El-Fasher early Saturday morning. The road was exhausting — hunger, thirst and constant checkpoints. Before Garni, we were stopped for three hours. They said I must have been fighting because I was injured. If it wasn’t for a family passing by with a donkey cart carrying their mother, I wouldn’t have reached Garni. They helped me get there.

“The situation in El-Fasher is so terrible — dead bodies in the streets, and no one to bury them. We’re grateful we made it here, even if we only have the clothes we were wearing. Here, we finally feel some safety. I went to the clinic and they checked my leg.”

- Mohamed, father of four: Corpses ‘turned to bones’ -

“I used to live in the Zamzam camp (for displaced people). When the RSF entered the camp, I fled to El-Fasher and stayed in the Abu Shouk neighborhood. The fighting on Saturday was extremely heavy — my four daughters, their mother and I spent the entire day hiding in a trench until dawn on Sunday.

“We left before sunrise and walked toward Garni. On the way, they robbed me of my money and stopped the young men to take them. I saw dead bodies, some already turned to bones.

“They beat me on my back with sticks, and I already had shrapnel in my leg from a shell that fell near our home in Zamzam.

“We reached Tawila at sunset on Tuesday. Now, we have nowhere to stay. My daughters, their mother and I are sleeping in the open without any covers. Aid workers gave us some food, but no tents or blankets.

“We just want the war to end so we can go back to our homes.”

- US-based Emtithal Mahmoud, 32: ‘Recognized my cousin from a video’ -

“It is almost impossible to describe the feeling that we’re feeling right now as people from Darfur. A lot of our family members are still trapped in the city. We don’t know who’s dead or alive.

“We have videos and reports of people being killed. It’s so terrible because even in the videos that the RSF is sharing, gloating as they commit a continuation of the genocide since the early 2000s, we’re recognizing our family members and friends. We found out that one of our cousins was killed because of a video that was circulating.

“In the video circulated by her killers, the RSF, you can see her corpse on the ground. And you can hear the RSF person saying, ‘Get up if you can.’ And so they’re taunting her corpse and it’s another form of torture.

“She was a volunteer for quite some time and when the siege happened she joined the resistance. She’s one of the women warriors.”


Turkish disaster relief teams still awaiting Israeli go-ahead to enter Gaza

Turkish disaster relief teams still awaiting Israeli go-ahead to enter Gaza
Updated 30 October 2025
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Turkish disaster relief teams still awaiting Israeli go-ahead to enter Gaza

Turkish disaster relief teams still awaiting Israeli go-ahead to enter Gaza
  • The 81-member team from the AFAD disaster management left for the Gaza border just over a week ago with specialized search-and-rescue tools
  • Israel’s relationship with Turkiye has nosedived since the Gaza war started in October 2023

ANKARA: A Turkish disaster response team is still waiting by the Gaza border for Israeli approval to enter the Palestinian territory to help with search and rescue operations, a defense ministry source said Thursday.

The 81-member team from the AFAD disaster management left for the Gaza border just over a week ago with specialized search-and-rescue tools, including life-detection devices and trained search dogs.

But they need Israel’s approval to enter Gaza, which has been largely reduced to rubble after two years of Israeli bombardments.

“AFAD is still waiting at the border. Israel still did not issue any authorization” for the team to enter, the source said.

Israel’s relationship with Turkiye has nosedived since the Gaza war started in October 2023 with Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu adamantly opposed to a Turkish presence in Gaza.

Ankara is hoping its role as a guarantor of the recent Gaza ceasefire will give it some leverage and allow it to participate in the international peacekeeping mission currently being put together.

The ministry source said efforts to establish a task force were ongoing, with Turkiye “still in contact” with counterparts over its participation, and its military “ready” to get involved if needed.

“Turkiye is one of the architects of the ceasefire and signed the agreement. We did all our preparations and are waiting,” the source said.

Earlier this week, Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said only countries that were “at least fair” to Israel could send troops to secure Gaza, ruling out Turkiye’s participation over its “hostile statements” and “diplomatic and economic measures” against Israel.

“It is not reasonable for us to let their armed forces enter (the) Gaza Strip, and we will not agree to that,” he added.

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