UK announces sanctions against extremist settler groups in West BankThe UK foreign minister David Lammy criticised the “inaction of the Israeli government” for allowing “impunity to flourish” among extremist settlers in the West Bank while announcing a fresh wave of sanctions against the groups in response to continued violence.
David Lammy arrives in Downing Street on Tuesday to attend the weekly Cabinet meeting Photograph: Wiktor Szymanowicz/Future Publishing/Getty ImagesThe measures target three outposts and four organisations that have supported and perpetrated “heinous abuses of human rights” against Palestinian communities in the occupied territory, the Foreign Secretary said.
Settler outposts sanctioned on Tuesday include Tirzah Valley Farm Outpost, Meitarim Outpost and Shuvi Eretz Outpost.
The four organisations targeted are Od Yosef Chai Yeshiva, Hashomer Yosh, Torat Lechima and Amana.
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Israel’s government has turned to its defence sector to bolster the military’s ability to intercept aerial drones launched by Iran or Hezbollah.
The country’s defence ministry said it had launched a competition among eight large and small companies.
“After analysing the trial results, the Defence Ministry will select several technologies to enter an accelerated development and production process. This aims to deploy new operational capabilities within months,” it said.
In addition to missiles, Iran, Hezbollah and others have used drones in attacks on Israel.
The United States has imposed sanctions on what it said was a key international fundraiser for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), which Washington has designated a terrorist organization.
The U.S. Treasury Department, in action taken with Canada, said in a statement it imposed sanctions on the Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, accusing it of being “a sham charity that serves as an international fundraiser” for the PFLP.
The PFLP, which has also taken part in the fight against Israel in Gaza, was designated a Foreign Terrorist Organization and a Specially Designated Global Terrorist by the U.S. in 1997 and in 2001.
The Treasury said PFLP uses Samidoun to fundraise in Europe and North America. The group’s activities were banned by Germany last year, Reuters reports.
“Organizations like Samidoun masquerade as charitable actors that claim to provide humanitarian support to those in need, yet in reality divert funds for much-needed assistance to support terrorist groups,” Treasury’s acting under secretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, Bradley Smith, said in the statement.
More now on the political backdrop to the UK’s decision to impose sanctions on settlers in the West Bank for the third time.
The Foreign Office said the move had been in preparation for weeks and was not a kneejerk response to former UK foreign minister David Cameron’s disclosure that he would have sanctioned two members of the Israeli government.
Our diplomatic editor Patrick Wintour has more, below
The map below shows the areas of Gaza affected by the ongoing conflict. Israeli forces are thought to be tightening their grip around Jabalia in the north of the strip
Guardian graphic showing the Gaza stripThe reports come as Israeli forces expand operations into northern Gaza amid ongoing concerns about access to humanitarian aid throughout the enclave and civilians’ access to food, water and medicine, as mentioned in our post at 1.16BST.
The United States last week also told the UN Security Council Israel needs to address urgently “catastrophic conditions” among Palestinian civilians in the besieged Gaza Strip and stop “intensifying suffering” by limiting aid deliveries.
A makeshift camp for displaced Palestinians in Mawasi Khan Yunis in southern Gaza Photograph: Bashar Taleb/AFP/Getty ImagesThe secretaries’ letter cited Section 620i of the Foreign Assistance Act, which restricts (prohibits) military aid to countries that impede delivery of U.S. humanitarian assistance.
US officials earlier this year said Israel may have violated international humanitarian law using U.S.-supplied weapons during its military operation in Gaza.
US says Israel must take steps to improve humanitarian situation in Gaza or face legal action – reportBack to events in Gaza now, and as we reported in our post at 1.32pm BST, the UN believe the area is facing the worst restrictions on aid since the current conflict began on October 7
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and defence secretary Lloyd Austin have reportedly told Israel it must take urgent steps to improve the humanitarian situation in Gaza to avoid legal action involving US military aid.
“We are writing now to underscore the US government’s deep concern over the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Gaza, and seek urgent and sustained actions by your government this month to reverse this trajectory,” they wrote in an October 13 letter to their Israeli counterparts, posted by an Axios reporter on X.
Foreign Office outlines West Bank outposts and organisations subject to UK sanctionsMore now on those new sanctions announced by the UK government as targeting three settler outposts and four organisations in the West Bank.
The UK Foreign Office has released a statement expanding on the reasoning behind the move, made – it says – in response to a rise in violence against Palestinian communities. This is expected to peak during this month – the start of the olive harvest.
Volunteers take a break during the olive harvest season in the village of Qusra, south of Nablus in the occupied West Bank Photograph: Zain Jaafar/AFP/Getty ImagesThe illegal settler outposts sanctioned – Tirzah Valley Farm Outpost, Meitarim Outpost, and Shuvi Eretz Outpost – have been “involved in facilitating, inciting, promoting or providing support for activity that amounts to a serious abuse of the right of Palestinians not to be subjected to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment,” the Foreign Office said.
They’ve also provided details on the four organisations now subject to sanctions.
Od Yosef Chai Yeshiva is a religious school embedded in the Yitzhar settlement, while Hashomer Yosh is a non-governmental organisation that provides volunteers for illegal outposts, including Meitarim Outpost, also sanctioned today). Meitarim was founded by the extremist settler Yinon Levy, who the UK sanctioned in February.
Torat Lechima is a registered Israeli charity that has been documented as providing financial support to illegal settler outposts linked with acts of violence against Palestinian communities in the West Bank.
Amana has overseen the establishment of illegal outposts and provides funding and other economic resources for Israeli settlers involved in threatening and perpetrating acts of aggression and violence against Palestinian communities in the West Bank.
Hussam Abu Safiya, director of Kamal Adwan Hospital, one of the three hospitals in northern Gaza, said they were facing serious shortages of food, medication, and fuel, that could soon impact patients in their facilities.
“There is a stark shortage of consumables and supplies began to run out. Milk is running out, and everything available is depleting and we could face a humanitarian disaster that would impact those in the maternity and the neonatal units,” said Abu Safiya in a video appeal to international relief and human rights groups.
The northern part of Gaza is home to well over half the territory’s 2.3 million people. Around 400,000 people remain, according to United Nations estimates.
A view of the destruction after Israel targeted the tents of displaced civilians in courtyard of Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah, Gaza on October 15, 2024. As a result of the attack, many tents were destroyed. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty ImagesUK announces sanctions against extremist settler groups in West BankThe UK foreign minister David Lammy criticised the “inaction of the Israeli government” for allowing “impunity to flourish” among extremist settlers in the West Bank while announcing a fresh wave of sanctions against the groups in response to continued violence.
David Lammy arrives in Downing Street on Tuesday to attend the weekly Cabinet meeting Photograph: Wiktor Szymanowicz/Future Publishing/Getty ImagesThe measures target three outposts and four organisations that have supported and perpetrated “heinous abuses of human rights” against Palestinian communities in the occupied territory, the Foreign Secretary said.
Settler outposts sanctioned on Tuesday include Tirzah Valley Farm Outpost, Meitarim Outpost and Shuvi Eretz Outpost.
The four organisations targeted are Od Yosef Chai Yeshiva, Hashomer Yosh, Torat Lechima and Amana.
Lisa O’Carroll
Ireland is not going to “wait” for the rest of the EU to take action against extremist Israeli settlers, the country’s prime minister has said, amid growing frustration in Dublin and Madrid over Brussels’ perceived inaction.
On his way into a cabinet meeting in Dublin, Simon Harris said he Ireland is “not going to wait for consensus” in the EU to take action.
It comes as Ireland looks afresh at drating legislation which could block imports of products made in the occupied territories.
Such laws were considered in 2020 but it is thought a stronger legal case exists in the wake of July’s International Court of Justice advisory opinion that there were multiple breaches of international law in the occupation of Palestinian territories.
Taoiseach (Prime Minister) Simon Harris of Ireland on Wednesday, October 9, 2024. Photograph: ABACA/REX/ShutterstockSpanish prime minister Pedro Sanchez called on the European Commission to “once and for all” respond to the “formal request” made by Dublin and Madrid in February “to suspend” the trade association agreement.
After his meeting with Joe Biden in Washington last week Harris said he would be asking the EU to revisit the trade agreement complaining the world was not doing enough to stop the human catastrophe in the Middle East.
“When people look back at this time in history, it will be a moment of shame of the world that more is not done to stop the war,” he said.
In a sign Israel may expand its ground operations against Hezbollah while bolstering its own defences, its troops have cleared landmines and established new barriers on the frontier between the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights and a demilitarised strip bordering Syria, security sources and analysts told Reuters.
The move suggests Israel may seek to strike Hezbollah for the first time from further east along Lebanon’s border, at the same time creating a secure area from which it can freely reconnoitre the armed group and prevent infiltration, the sources said.
Israel’s mine removal and engineering works have accelerated in recent weeks, according to a Syrian intelligence officer, a Syrian soldier positioned in southern Syria, and three senior Lebanese security sources who spoke to Reuters for this story.
Hezbollah’s deputy secretary general Sheikh Naim Qassem said on Tuesday the militant group has adopted a new calculation so that Israel feels ‘pain’, even though he called for a ceasefire.
Conflict-ravaged Gaza appears to be facing the worst restrictions on aid since the Israel-Hamas war began over a year ago, the UN said Tuesday, lamenting the especially devastating impact on children.
“Day after day, the situation for children becomes worse than the day before,” said James Elder, spokesman for the UN children’s agency UNICEF.
Despite a desperate need to increase the amount of aid going in to Gaza, Elder lamented that aid access was worsening. “August was the lowest amount of humanitarian aid that came into the Gaza Strip of any full month since the war broke out,” he said.
There had been “several days in the last week (where) no commercial trucks whatsoever were allowed to come in,” Elder added.
Israeli military “cutting off North Gaza completely”, UN human rights office saysThe United Nations human rights office said on Tuesday the Israeli military appeared to be “cutting off North Gaza completely from the rest of the Gaza Strip.”
“Amid intense ongoing hostilities and evacuation orders in northern Gaza families are facing unimaginable fear, loss of loved ones, confusion, and exhaustion. People must be able to flee safely, without facing further danger,” Adrian Zimmerman, ICRC Gaza head of sub-delegation, said in a statement.
“Many, including the sick and disabled, cannot leave, and they remain protected under international humanitarian law all possible precautions must be taken to ensure they remain unharmed. Every person displaced has the right to return home in safety,” he added.
The Israeli military’s humanitarian unit, Cogat, which overseas aid and commercial shipments to Gaza, said in a statement on Tuesday that the operations in Jabalia were targeting terrorist infrastructure and operatives embedded inside civilian areas. It said it was facilitating humanitarian and in particular medical aid to residents.
A boy climbs through the rubble of a collapsed building following Israeli bombardment in the Saftawi district in Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip on 15 October 2024 amid the ongoing war in the Palestinian territory between Israel and Hamas. Photograph: Omar Al-Qattaa/AFP/Getty Images