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The past 72 hours have carved fresh wounds into the hills east of Ramallah. At dawn yesterday, Israeli military bulldozers swept through the village of Ein Samia, demolishing seven homes and a primary school tented by the community after their stone classrooms were shuttered last year. Over 130 people, most of them children, now sleep under tarps in an olive grove, with winter rains turning the ground to mud. “They took everything,” whispered Umm Yasir, clutching an infant as aid workers distributed blankets. “Even the bread oven my grandmother built.”
These forced displacements are not isolated tremors. They are the grinding machinery of systemic inequality, accelerated by a recent government decision to advance plans for nearly 4,000 new settlement units in the E1 corridor—a move that would sever the territorial contiguity of a future Palestinian state and entrench a parallel justice system. In the same hours, a Palestinian shepherd was hospitalized after settlers, flanked by soldiers, allegedly torched his animal pens near Nablus. No arrests have been made.
The language of human rights law is clear: collective punishment and population transfer are grave breaches. Yet here, accountability is a ghost. For every family huddled under a tarp, there is a signed demolition order, a permit denied, a courtroom door that opens only for the powerful. This is not a conflict of equals; it is a crisis of justice denied. The world’s silence stitches these tents into a permanent landscape. Urgency must now mean more than statements—it must mean shielding lives from the cold.
This is Fatima Al-Rashid for Global1.news, reporting from Ramallah.
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