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News ID: 114816
Publish Date : 08 May 2023 - 22:27

UN: Zionist Settlers Destroy 5,000 Palestinian Trees in Five Months

WEST BANK (Dispatches) – Zionist settlers damaged more than 5,000 trees in Palestinian villages across the occupied West Bank in the last five months.
UN data shows that 4,000 trees were damaged in 84 incidents between 20 December 2022 and the end of April.
Another 1,150 trees were vandalized in the last week, according to figures compiled by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz.
Palestinian farmers and their lands are a target of repeated attacks by Zionist settlers, which include physical assault, vandalism and theft, especially during harvest seasons, according to the UN.
Almost half of the Palestinian agricultural lands are planted with an estimated 10 million olive trees in the West Bank and besieged Gaza Strip.
While Zionist settler violence against Palestinians is common in the West Bank, attacks have grown in recent years at an alarming rate, according to UN human rights experts.
At least 849 attacks were recorded in 2022 - 228 of which led to casualties. Around 13,130 Palestinian-owned olive trees were damaged in that period.
Human rights groups have previously accused Zionist regime authorities of enabling settler violence and failing to prosecute Zionist offenders or protect Palestinians.
“Armed and masked Israeli settlers are attacking Palestinians in their homes, attacking children on their way to school, destroying property and burning olive groves, and terrorizing entire communities with complete impunity,” UN experts said last year.
“Disturbing evidence of Israeli forces frequently facilitating, supporting and participating in settler attacks, makes it difficult to discern between Israeli settler and State violence,” they added.
Nearly 700,000 settlers live in more than 250 settlements and outposts across the West Bank and East Al-Quds in violation of international law.
On Sunday, Zionist troops demolished a Palestinian primary school in the occupied West Bank, citing safety issues and drawing sharp criticism from the European Union which had funded the project.
The EU said it was “appalled” after Zionist troops arrived at dawn at the school site, which a Palestinian Authority official said served 45 students and consisted of five classrooms.