The issue of settler violence is deeply intertwined with broader political, social, and historical narratives and continues to be a point of contention in the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
As reports emerge of settler attacks on Palestinian communities, one cannot help but reflect on the moral and ethical accountability that must be demanded from all parties involved, particularly Israel, as the occupying power.
The US condemned as “unacceptable” deadly rampage attacks on a Palestinian village and town by Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank, saying that its key ally Israel must protect Palestinian “communities from harm.”
This came as dozens of masked Israeli settlers, some armed, hurled rocks and Molotov cocktails as they stormed the Palestinian village of Jit, setting fire to several cars and destroying property.
The Palestinian Health Ministry said that a 23-year-old Palestinian man, identified as Mahmoud Abdel Qader Sadda, was killed in the settler violence and another Palestinian suffered critical gunshot wounds to the chest in the attack on the village of Jit, located east of Qalqilya city.
The Israeli military said that they are investigating two separate attacks in the occupied West Bank by armed Israeli settlers. The first on the village of Jit and the second on the town of Huwara.
“Attacks by violent settlers against Palestinian civilians in the West Bank are unacceptable and must stop,” a US National Security Council spokesperson said in a statement.
“Israeli authorities must take measures to protect all communities from harm, this includes intervening to stop such violence and holding all perpetrators of such violence to account,” the spokesperson said.
What is striking is the duality of the situation: while the plight of Palestinians living under occupation continues to deteriorate, Israeli settlers increasingly feel emboldened to act with impunity.
The unchecked growth of settlements, accompanied by heightened militarization, creates an environment where violence is not just tolerated but, in some cases, overlooked.
This emboldenment is exacerbated by the current political landscape, which often favors expansionist policies over meaningful dialogue and peace.
Settler Violence Against Palestinians Attributable To Israeli State
However, the onus of accountability extends beyond the immediate perpetrators of violence to the broader Israeli government and military apparatus.
In a series of posts on social media, humanitarian law expert, Itay Epshtain said that Israeli “settler violence is aided and supported” by institutions of the Israeli state, including ministries and regional and local councils involved in the illegal settlements.
“Settler violence against Palestinians is attributable to the State of Israel and its central and local government,” Epshtain said.
According to him, the international community can, and must, employ “lawful countermeasures” to compel Israel to abide by international law, which is being “seriously and systematically breached through settler violence.”
“The adequate response to the upsurge of settler violence, including the deadly incident tonight, is to subject Israeli ministries and the ministers who head them, and local government and heads of regional and local settlement councils to financial restrictions and travel bans.”
Itay Epshtain
The International Court of Justice affirmed in July that Israel’s military presence in the occupied Palestinian territory is unlawful, he said, and all illegal Israeli settlements must be immediately dismantled, and settlers must withdraw from Palestinian land.
“The organs of government that allow for continued Israeli presence, and the violence it brings with it, are an affront to international law and must be met with political resolve to impose sanctions.”
Itay Epshtain
Additionally, the UN’s special rapporteur on the human rights situation in the occupied Palestinian territory said that “sanctions must be imposed” on Israel over Israeli settler violence against Palestinian communities in the occupied West Bank.
In a post on social media highlighting remarks by humanitarian law expert, Itay Epshtain, that “settler violence is instructed, directed, and controlled” by Israeli state officials, the UN’s Francesca Albanese said that sanctions need to go beyond individual settlers and illegal settlements.
“Time to act was decades ago: as it was not done, that time is now,” Albanese said.
The responsibility to protect all communities, as acknowledged by international bodies and even allies like the United States, requires both proactively preventing violence and addressing impunity.
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