Israeli settler attacks on Palestinians increase under coronavirus lockdown
Rasim Abdo was sitting in his living room at his home in the Nablus-area village of Beit Ibriya on Wednesday when he got a call from his older brother Harbi.
"He was screaming and crying in pain and was telling me to get to the mountain immediately," Rasim told Middle East Eye. "He said he had been attacked by settlers and was badly hurt."
Harbi Abdo, 50, and his 26-year-old nephew had taken the family's flock of 220 sheep to graze in the hills between Beit Ibriya and the village of Burqa, when a group of 15 masked Israeli settlers, armed with guns, descended upon them from a nearby hilltop.
"The settlers began hurling stones at Harbi and my nephew and attacking the flock," Abdo recounted.
"Then when they got closer, they began beating Harbi with large rocks on his head, chest, and legs."
By the time Rasim and a group of his cousins and neighbours ran up to the mountain, his brother Harbi was lying on the ground, his leg broken. A few hundred metres away, the group of settlers was attempting to flee, and take the flock of sheep with it.
'I thought, who could do this to innocent animals? But these Israeli settlers clearly have no regard for human life, so why would they care about animals?'
- Rasim Abdo
"We immediately split up into two groups: one group to tend to my brother and nephew, and the other to run after the settlers and get our animals back," Rasim told MEE.
The group was able to retrieve 200 sheep, but the settlers managed to run off with 20 animals.
"From the group of sheep that we brought back home, dozens of them were injured, covered in blood, and some even had their legs broken by the settlers," Rasim said.
"I thought, who could do this to innocent animals? But these Israeli settlers clearly have no regard for human life, so why would they care about animals?"
Attacks increase under Covid-19
The Abdo family, like thousands of other Palestinians living in rural areas of the West Bank, are no strangers to settler violence, which happens on a near daily basis.
Since the coronavirus outbreak, Rasim says he has seen a noticeable increase in settler attacks.
"Just in the past week there have been two other attacks," he told MEE.
"A few days ago, I was walking near the main road and these settlers were perched on a hill above and were throwing rocks at me and any Palestinians passing by."
Days before that, Rasim said that settlers destroyed a roadside kiosk owned by a neighbour, breaking the stall and stealing its engine.
"The settlers are using this pandemic to attack us more... Most Palestinians are scared to confront them because we don’t want to contract the virus from them," he said.
In the two months since the occupied Palestinian territory went under a Covid-19 lockdown, activists and rights groups have recorded a sharp increase in the number of settler attacks on Palestinians and their property.
In an April report, Israeli human rights group B'Tselem recorded 23 settler attacks against Palestinians in the first three weeks of April alone, and 23 attacks during March (11 of which occurred post-lockdown). Meanwhile, there were 12 reported attacks in February, and 11 in January.
"The attacks have increased despite the movement restrictions, lockdowns and social distancing measures introduced to battle the pandemic," B'Tselem said, adding that the attacks have been physical, involved the torching of Palestinian cars, theft of livestock and destruction of trees.
On Thursday morning, less than 24 hours after the attack on Harbi Abdo and his sheep, Israeli settlers in the southern West Bank district of Bethlehem plowed down more than 40 grape trees in the al-Khader village, near Efrat settlement.
"These actions are part of a joint strategy by the settlers and Israeli authorities to systematically block Palestinian access to land... and take effective control of it," B'Tselem said in its report.
"This way the state transfers the means of livelihood of Palestinians into the hands of Israelis. Settler violence is the state’s unofficial, privatized arm that serves to gradually achieve this goal."
No justice
Following the attack on his brother, Rasim and his family reached out to the Palestinian liaison office to coordinate with Israeli authorities to open an investigation into the attack.
It is part of a routine procedure in such instances, but Rasim said he doesn’t have much hope for a positive outcome.
"If any investigation is even opened, it is highly unlikely that we will be compensated for the sheep that were stolen, and for the damage done to my brother's leg," he said.
Harbi underwent surgery on Thursday morning so doctors could insert a titanium plate in his leg.
Justice and accountability for the settler attack, Rasim said, is even further out of reach.
"Even if we were to go to court in Israel, we would not get justice. This is why the settlers keep attacking us in this way, because there is no accountability," he said.
"They have free rein to attack Palestinians without consequences."
"We are just shepherds trying to live our lives in peace and safety, but the settlers and the occupation refuse to leave Palestinians in peace."
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