Batı Şeria'da tarlalarına ulaşmaya çalışan Filistinli çiftçiler, sivil işgalci Yahudilerin saldırısına uğradı. Bir süredir bölgeyi işgal eden Yahudi yerleşimciler, Filistinlilere silahla saldırdı.
Israel: Converts to Islam on the rise as Jewish group vows to show ‘a way out’
Source: Middle East Monitor
Palestinian Muslims pray during the first Friday Prayer of Islamic holy month of Ramadan at the Al-Aqsa Mosque after Israeli authorities allowed.
An Israeli organisation which opposes mixed marriages between Jews and Arabs plans to help converts to Islam who have “lost their way” and thus prevent what they believe is Jewish assimilation with non-Jews in Israel.
According to a report by Sputnik News, Lehava, which many perceive to be an alt-right movement accused of incitement and even terrorism, is committed to helping women in particular go back into the fold of Judaism after marrying Israeli Arab men and converting to Islam.
Published date: 19 December 2020 10:24 UTC | Last update: 2 months 1 week ago
Headers on official papers issued by the Qalandiya local council still bear the icon of an aeroplane, a reminder of the Palestinian dream of one day having their own airport.
But Israel is inching closer to building an illegal settlement on the site of what was once known as the Jerusalem International Airport, burying with it Palestinian hopes of claiming it as their own.
Israel plans to expand settlement cutting off Jerusalem from West Bank townsRead More »
Israeli media reported last week that Israeli authorities had approved a plan for the settlement of Atarot with 9,000 housing units, which they described as a move deliberately taking place ahead of the inauguration in January of US President-elect Joe Biden, who has expressed his opposition to settlement construction, which violates international law.
Israel starts turning Jerusalem International Airport into settlement December 10, 2020 at 8:00 am | Published in: Israel, Middle East, News, Palestine
A General view shows the site of Atarot airport in the Qalandia area in northern Jerusalem on 29 August 2013. [Issam Rimawi/Apaimages] December 10, 2020 at 8:00 am
The recent decision of the Israeli District Planning and Building Committee in Jerusalem to build 9,000 settlement units in the Israeli settlement of Atarot will erase the remnants of the Jerusalem International Airport built in 1924,
The New Khalij reported on Wednesday.
Head of Maps at the Arab Studies Society Khalil Tafakji was reported by
The New Khalij confirming that Israel is planning to establish an entirely new settlement, mostly located on the land of the Jerusalem International Airport.