In a move that has heightened fears of further military and settler violence, as well as collective punishment, Israeli forces have stormed towns in the occupied West Bank and begun demolishing the homes of Palestinian suspects following a deadly attack in East Jerusalem.
Israel said on Tuesday, September 9, 2025 that it surveyed and ordered the demolition of the homes of two Palestinians suspected of the shooting on Monday at Ramot Junction in occupied East Jerusalem, which killed six people and wounded 12. Both suspects were killed in the attack.
During the crackdown in the West Bank, Israeli forces also destroyed the home of another Palestinian suspected of having carried out a shooting in December.
Soldiers encircled the house of detainee Thabet Masalma in the town of Beit Awwa, southwest of Hebron, before blowing up the property with explosives.
Masalma is accused of taking part in an attack that killed an Israeli settler and wounded three people. The demolition left the detainee’s wife, parents and three children homeless.
The raid sparked clashes with locals, during which Israeli soldiers fired live ammunition, wounding two people.
The Israeli human rights group B’Tselem has documented at least 26 home demolitions in the West Bank as a punitive measure in 2025. It said that they have displaced more than 70 Palestinians.
While raids and settler attacks against Palestinians in the West Bank have ramped up since the war in Gaza began in October 2023, Monday’s attack at Ramot Junction has heightened tensions and sparked fears of increased violence and repression.
According to reports, Israeli forces on Tuesday stormed the town of Biddu near Qubeiba and closed its main entrance, which connects it to the town of al-Jib and is the only main road for nearly “70,000 citizens in the area.”
During the raid, Israeli forces fired live ammunition, sound bombs and, during clashes with locals, tear gas. Israeli forces also raided several other towns northwest of Jerusalem and carried out arrests using tear gas.
Israeli Army Chief, Eyal Zamir said in a statement that he had ordered a “full closure” of the area that the alleged gunmen in Monday’s shooting had come from.

“We will continue with a determined and ongoing operational and intelligence effort, we will pursue terror cells everywhere, and we will thwart terrorist infrastructure and its organisers,” he said.
Eyal Zamir
Meanwhile, other reports indicated that a number of settlers had attacked homes belonging to Palestinians and spray-painted racist slogans in the village of Jurish, south of Nablus.
Israeli settlers vandalised vehicles belonging to Palestinians in Jurish, a town southeast of Nablus, breaking their windows, while another group of settlers cut down olive trees grown by Palestinian families in neighbouring Aqraba.
In Hebron governorate, Israeli forces arrested two people and set up several military checkpoints at the entrances to towns, villages and camps. Soldiers also closed several primary and secondary roads.
Sanctions To Be Imposed On Suspects’ Families

In a statement, Defence Minister Israel Katz said that he ordered sanctions to be imposed on the family members of the two Palestinians suspected of the shooting on Monday at Ramot Junction, as well as residents of their towns, Qatanna and Qubeiba, northwest of Jerusalem in the West Bank.
Those sanctions included the demolition of every structure built without permits in the towns and the revocation of 750 work permits and entry permits to Israel.
Israeli government Ministers, including Katz and far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, issued hardline statements in the wake of Monday’s attack, promising to demolish homes and deport the suspects’ family members.
While Israel says such actions are intended as a deterrent to future attacks, Palestinians and human rights groups say they amount to a form of collective punishment, which is prohibited under international law.
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