Surge in Israeli settler violence in West Bank since start of Iran war

At least five Palestinians killed during attacks by settlers in 11 days

A pro-settlement sign put up by Israeli settlers on the side of a road near Nablus City reads in Hebrew: 'Welcome to northern Samaria. We have returned to our homes' in the West Bank. Photograph: EPA
A pro-settlement sign put up by Israeli settlers on the side of a road near Nablus City reads in Hebrew: 'Welcome to northern Samaria. We have returned to our homes' in the West Bank. Photograph: EPA

Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank are taking advantage of curbs on movement imposed during the war on Iran to attack Palestinians, with ‌military roadblocks preventing ambulances reaching victims quickly, rights groups and medics say.

Settlers have killed at least five Palestinians in the West Bank since the United States and Israel began air strikes against Iran on February 28th, according to the Palestinian health ministry. A sixth man died after inhaling ​tear gas fired during an attack, according to Israeli rights group B’Tselem.

Israel’s military blocked many West Bank roads with iron gates and mounds of earth on the first day of the war, and has largely shut crossings with Israel.

The Israeli military says the curbs are pre-emptive measures while it is carrying out air strikes on Iran and against Lebanese group Hizbullah, which has fired missiles at Israel in solidarity with Tehran.

Palestinians in remote West Bank villages say the roadblocks have left them increasingly exposed to settler violence.

The Israeli military has also continued to carry out ​the raids it frequently conducts in Palestinian cities and towns during peacetime to arrest Palestinians, often without charge, they say.

The Israeli military said they do not prevent medical teams from treating wounded civilians and it enables freedom of movement for medical teams in the West Bank.

A spokesperson for the ⁠Yesha Council, which represents Jewish settlements, did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the attacks.

Malak Beirat’s husband, Thaer, was one of two Palestinians who residents and the Palestinian ‌health ‌ministry ​say were shot dead by settlers before dawn on Sunday in Abu Falah, north of the city of Ramallah.

“Thaer loved life. I never expected he would die,” said Beirat, fighting back tears as she sat with her two children.

Mourners carry the remains  of three Palestinians killed in a reported attack by Israeli settlers in the town of Abu Falah, northeast of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, earlier ths week. Photograph: Zain Jaafar/AFP/Getty Images
Mourners carry the remains of three Palestinians killed in a reported attack by Israeli settlers in the town of Abu Falah, northeast of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, earlier ths week. Photograph: Zain Jaafar/AFP/Getty Images

Witnesses said that when more than 100 settlers gathered on the outskirts of Abu Falah, a local WhatsApp group ⁠rallied men to protect the small village. The initial confrontation involved stone throwing, but armed settlers arrived ​later and began shooting, they said.

Beirat’s husband was shot dead while trying to protect a house from attack, ​a man who helped defend the village said.

Blood could still be seen on Monday in olive groves at the scene of the attack, where villagers have erected two Palestinian flags at the spots where the two men were killed – one ‌for each victim.

A third Palestinian died after the attack. B’Tselem said his death ​was probably caused by the effect of tear gas fired by Israeli troops deployed to the village during the attack.

The Israeli military said an investigation had been launched into the incident and that it condemned “violence of ⁠any kind”.

Medics say the new roadblocks have led to delays ⁠in reaching injured Palestinians.

“There are obstacles – and even attacks by ​settlers and the military on the [medical] crews,” said Ahmed Jibril, spokesman for the Palestinian Red Crescent ambulance service.

There have been more than 100 reports of settler violence against Palestinians in the West Bank since the start of the war with Iran including shootings, physical assaults, property damage and threats, said Israeli monitoring group Yesh Din.

All the reported killings of Palestinians by settlers this year were in the last week, B’Tselem said.

Ireland among 100 countries and groups to ‘strongly condemn’ Israel’s West Bank expansionOpens in new window ]

Settlers shot dead Amir Muhammad Shanaran in a village near the city of Hebron on Saturday, and brothers Muhammad and Fahim ‘Azem were shot dead in Qaryut, southeast of the city of Nablus, last Monday, the Palestinian health ministry said.

“Taking advantage of the war, armed settler militias, often operating with support from the army, continue to attack and harass Palestinian communities across the West Bank in an effort to force them out,” B’Tselem said.

In three of the settler shootings, the settlers were wearing Israeli army uniforms, Yesh Din said. The Israeli military said the incidents were under investigation.

Palestinians accuse the military of protecting settlers rather ‌than villagers. Israel’s military denies this.

Israeli indictments of ⁠settler violence are rare. At the end of 2025, Yesh Din said that of the hundreds of cases of settler violence it had documented since the Hamas-led attacks on Israel in October 2023 that led to the Gaza war, only 2 per cent resulted in indictments.

The United Nations says nearly 700 Palestinians were displaced by settler violence from the start of 2025 until early February 2026.

Israel’s ‌government has expanded settlements in a construction push that minister for finance Bezalel Smotrich says is aimed at burying the idea of a Palestinian state.

Right-wing Israeli minister Yossi Dagan announced on Wednesday the establishment of a new settlement in a strategic position in the mountain overlooking Nablus, one ​of 22 new settlements announced by the Israeli government last May.

Palestinians have long sought an independent state in the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem, ​territories Israel captured and occupied in the 1967 Middle East war.

More than 700,000 settlers live in East Jerusalem and the West Bank among more than three million Palestinians, according to a European Union report in 2024.

Most of the world considers Israel’s settlement activity in the West Bank illegal under international law relating to military occupations. Israel disputes this view. – Reuters

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2026

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