Al-Khalil – Saba:
On Sunday, extremist settlers took control of dozens of dunums of agricultural land in the city of Al-Khalil, located in the southern occupied West Bank.
Local sources reported that settlers have seized 60 dunams of agricultural land to the south of Al-Khalil.
Ibrahim al-Tal explained that settlers have taken control of approximately 60 dunams of his family's land, which belongs to Taleb al-Tal's sons: Ahmed, Muhammad, and Hassan. This land is located in the Tayaran area near the Shamaa settlement, which has been constructed on land owned by local citizens in the town of Dhahriya, south of Al-Khalil.
Enemy forces also expelled farmers from their land south of Al-Khalil.
Citizen Nayef Al-Basaita said that the enemy forces forced farmers to leave their lands and prevented them from continuing to plow and cultivate them, under the pretext that they were state property, and their owners were not allowed to enter them until they obtained special permits, and these lands, estimated at 250 dunums, belong to the families, Abu Sharkh, Manseh, Makhraza, and Al-Tal.
The Tayaran area is subjected to a systematic and unprecedented campaign by allows settlers to control citizens' lands, exploit them for the benefit of pastoral settlement or the establishment of new outposts, and the expansion of the aforementioned settlement.
On Sunday, extremist settlers took control of dozens of dunums of agricultural land in the city of Al-Khalil, located in the southern occupied West Bank.
Local sources reported that settlers have seized 60 dunams of agricultural land to the south of Al-Khalil.
Ibrahim al-Tal explained that settlers have taken control of approximately 60 dunams of his family's land, which belongs to Taleb al-Tal's sons: Ahmed, Muhammad, and Hassan. This land is located in the Tayaran area near the Shamaa settlement, which has been constructed on land owned by local citizens in the town of Dhahriya, south of Al-Khalil.
Enemy forces also expelled farmers from their land south of Al-Khalil.
Citizen Nayef Al-Basaita said that the enemy forces forced farmers to leave their lands and prevented them from continuing to plow and cultivate them, under the pretext that they were state property, and their owners were not allowed to enter them until they obtained special permits, and these lands, estimated at 250 dunums, belong to the families, Abu Sharkh, Manseh, Makhraza, and Al-Tal.
The Tayaran area is subjected to a systematic and unprecedented campaign by allows settlers to control citizens' lands, exploit them for the benefit of pastoral settlement or the establishment of new outposts, and the expansion of the aforementioned settlement.