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Settler outpost must be dismantled: Watchdog

Published: 10 Jan 2014 - 03:44 am | Last Updated: 28 Jan 2022 - 08:35 pm

JERUSALEM: Israeli settlements watchdog Peace Now has urged the government to dismantle an illegal outpost in the West Bank, after violent clashes in the area between Jewish settlers and Palestinians.
Israel must “enforce the law and remove Esh Kodesh, an illegal West Bank settlement established in violation of Israeli law”, Peace Now said in a letter to the government.
Residents of the outpost in the northern West Bank near Nablus had “repeatedly attacked neighbouring Palestinians”, it said.
On Tuesday, Palestinians beat and detained around a dozen settlers from Esh Kodesh who had entered Qusra village south of Nablus, then released them after negotiating with Israeli soldiers.
Qusra is just a few kilometres (miles) north of Esh Kodesh and is the scene of frequent clashes between settlers and Palestinians.
“Esh Kodesh is an outpost that serves as launching ground for severe unlawful activity, and as such... it creates severe friction that causes harm to people and their property, and therefore heavily burdens the security authorities,” Peace Now said.
After Tuesday’s incident, police placed seven settlers under house arrest until Friday while they investigate why they were in the village in the first place, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said.
Peace Now slammed the government for failing to carry out existing demolition orders on many so-called “wildcat” outposts — settlements which have not been formally approved and are therefore illegal.
Under international law, all settlement building in the Palestinian territories is illegal.
In the southern Gaza Strip yesterday, an Israeli air strike wounded two Palestinian militants, medical and security sources said.
“Two Palestinians were hit and injured by an Israeli drone while they were riding on a motorbike east of Khan Yunis,” Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry spokesman Ashraf Al Qudra said.
Palestinian security sources described the two as “militants”, without saying to which group they belonged.
The Israeli army confirmed the strike in a statement, saying it had “intercepted terrorists during their final preparations to launch rockets towards Israel”.
The strike came after three mortar rounds were fired at Israeli troops along the southern border fence, causing no injuries or damage, it said.
AFP