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Israel’s push to displace thousands of Palestinians from the West Bank 

In the occupied West Bank, much like in the Gaza Strip, Israeli policy is forcing thousands of Palestinians from their homes, in stark defiance of international law.

A report published last week by Human Rights Watch (HRW) highlighted the expulsion of 32,000 Palestinians from their homes in just three refugee camps this year. HRW said that the Israeli operation in the Jenin, Nur Shams, and Tulkarem refugee camps, which began in January, led to the biggest mass displacement of Palestinians in the West Bank since 1967.

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The displacements come as Israeli violence spirals in the West Bank, where more than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed by Israelis since October 7, 2023, and the start of Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza, and Israelis living in illegal settlements launch increasingly violent attacks on Palestinians.

In Area C, the part of the occupied West Bank without even symbolic Palestinian administrative control, the United Nations reported earlier in November that more than 1,000 Palestinians were displaced when Israel demolished their homes, with a further 500 people made homeless in occupied East Jerusalem. Israel cited a lack of permits for the demolitions, but building permits are notoriously hard to obtain for Palestinians in those areas.

Israel has so far faced few consequences for its actions in the occupied West Bank, even as reports from human rights organisations call for senior Israeli military and political officials to be investigated for the actions of Israeli forces in the West Bank refugee camps, and the ongoing displacement of civilians.

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“We are witnessing the total abandonment of Palestinian lives. Israel has already shown it is capable of far greater violence, as we are seeing in the Gaza Strip,” Israeli human rights group B’Tselem’s executive director Yuli Novak said on Friday. “The situation in the West Bank is deteriorating by the day and will only worsen, because there is no internal or external mechanism to restrain Israel or stop its ongoing policy of ethnic cleansing. The international community must put an end to Israel’s impunity and hold those responsible for crimes against the Palestinian people to account.”

What are Israel’s aims for the occupied West Bank?

According to many senior Israeli government figures, the aim is to annex the West Bank.

In October, Israel’s parliament granted preliminary approval for a bill that would extend Israeli sovereignty over the occupied West Bank, an action widely regarded as a flagrant breach of international law.

Israel’s hardline finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich – who lives in an illegal settlement  – has been clear in his intentions towards the occupied West Bank.

Speaking at a meeting of his Religious Zionism party last year, Smotrich told colleagues that he was “establish[ing] facts on the ground in order to make Judea and Samaria [the West Bank] an integral part of the state of Israel”.

“We will establish sovereignty … first on the ground, and then, through legislation. I intend to legalise the young settlements [illegal outposts],” the Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported Smotrich saying, “My life’s mission is to thwart the establishment of a Palestinian state.”

More than 700,000 Israelis live in illegal settlements on Palestinian land in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem.

In August, Smotrich announced the creation of a new “E1″ settlement involving the creation of 3,000 homes separating occupied East Jerusalem from the West Bank as part of a project the finance minister said would “bury the idea of a Palestinian state”.

Israeli far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich holds a map of an area near the settlement of Maale Adumim, a land corridor known as E1, outside Jerusalem in the occupied West Bank, on August 14, 2025, after a press conference at the site. [Menahem Kahana/AFP]
Israeli far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich holds a map of an area near the illegal settlement of Maale Adumim, a land corridor known as E1, outside Jerusalem in the occupied West Bank, on August 14, 2025, after a news conference at the site. [Menahem Kahana/AFP]

Has Israel said why it is displacing so many Palestinians?

In the areas of the occupied West Bank that it controls, Israeli authorities typically cite planning laws, or claim that Palestinian homes have been built on “closed military zones”: land designated for use by the Israeli state, its security services or for settlement.

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According to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), it is “almost impossible” for a Palestinian to gain a building permit from the Israeli authorities.

In the case of the Jenin, Nur Shams, and Tulkarem refugee camps, Israel claimed that it displaced residents as part of “Operation Iron Wall”, intended to eradicate resistance to its occupation from within the camps. However, months after Israeli forces first entered the camps in late January, residents still remain barred from returning, and bulldozers have destroyed many of their homes.

According to Israel’s military spokesperson, the demolitions were carried out for “operational necessity”, and residents were allowed to submit objections and petitions to Israel’s Supreme Court.

All such petitions, including those claiming that Israel’s actions breached international humanitarian law, have been rejected.

A Palestinian, Yahya Dalal, 32, walks near cars burnt in an attack by Israeli settlers, in Huwara in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, November 21, 2025. REUTERS/Ammar Awad
A Palestinian, Yahya Dalal, 32, walks near cars burned in an attack by Israeli settlers, in Huwara in the Israeli-occupied West Bank [Ammar Awad/Reuters]

Violence by settler groups – Israelis illegally make their homes within occupied Palestinian territory – is increasing, perhaps buoyed by fellow settlers occupying some of the highest positions in the Israeli state. In October, OCHA recorded more than 260 attacks resulting in casualties, property damage or both. That is an average of eight incidents per day: the highest number since the agency began collating data in 2006.

During the olive harvesting season, Israeli settlers have unleashed a surge of violence upon Palestinians, even as Israeli soldiers watch on.

According to the Palestinian Farmers’ Union (PFU), the most recent attacks are “not random, but deliberate efforts to undermine Palestinian rural life”.

Palestinians say the attacks are part of an attempt by settlers to make life increasingly unbearable for the indigenous population, and eventually force them out.

 

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Shambles to Host Fundraiser for St. John School of the Arts Dec. 12

The St. John School of the Arts is inviting the public to “Artistry Under the Stars,” a special community fundraiser taking place on Friday, Dec. 12, beginning at 5 p.m. at Shambles Island Bar & Grill in Susannaberg.
Fifty percent of food and beverage proceeds from the evening will directly support SJSA’s mission to provide high-quality arts education to children and their families on St. John.
With national federal budget cuts threatening arts programs across the country, Artistry Under the Stars offers the St. John community an opportunity to stand together in support of creativity, youth development, and expanded access to the arts.

 
“Arts education is more than taking a class,” said the Jeuné Provost, SJSA’s executive director. “It is a lifeline for creative exploration, confidence building, and community connection. This fundraiser helps ensure that every child on St. John continues to have access to transformative arts experiences, regardless of financial barriers.”

Guests will enjoy an evening of talent, inspiration, and community spirit under the night sky. The event also serves as a platform to highlight the impact of SJSA’s programming, which includes dance, music, theater, and visual arts.
For further information, please call the St. John School of the Arts at 340-779-4322 or email info@stjohnschoolofthearts.org.

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Virgin Islands News

New Center for Education on Coastal and Aquatic Risks Set to Open

On Dec. 13, the Virgin Islands Children’s Museum will host the grand opening of CERCA St. Thomas, a new science and safety center, with a free community event from 1 to 3 p.m.
CERCA, the Center for Education about Risks both Coastal and Aquatic, is designed to help families understand local environmental and marine hazards. Visitors will explore hands-on exhibits, preparedness stations, and demonstrations led by scientists and emergency officials. Grant funding will provide free admission not only for the grand opening but also for multiple CERCA events throughout 2026.
“At CERCA, hazard experts — including scientists, professors and local stakeholders — will engage visitors through live talks, multimedia resources and interactive activity tables,” said Amber McCammon, CEO of the Virgin Islands Children’s Museum and CERCA St. Thomas. “Guests of all ages will be able to deepen their knowledge of environmental risks and hazard-mitigation strategies while taking part in fun activities and even earning prizes.”
The center’s exhibits will give children and families practical, science-based tools for understanding hurricanes, flooding, tsunamis, earthquakes, sargassum and other hazards that regularly affect the territory. Displays focus on preparedness, hazard awareness and how to interpret real-world data in ways that are locally relevant.
Visitors at the opening will meet scientists and hazard professionals from the Caribbean Green Technology Center, the Caribbean Coastal Ocean Observing System, Ocean Coastal Observing–Virgin Islands, VITEMA and other regional partners. Scheduled speakers include Regina Browne, VITEMA’s deputy director of planning and preparedness; oceanographers Roy Watlington and Lincoln Critchley of OCOVI; and representatives from CARICOOS in Puerto Rico, who will discuss local environmental conditions and the importance of coastal and aquatic safety.
After the opening, the museum will host CERCA Saturdays throughout 2026, offering free open houses on nationally recognized math and science days such as Pi Day (March 14), Infinity Day (Aug. 8), Worldwide Day of Play (tentative, Sept. 19) and Fibonacci Day (Nov. 21).
“Our CERCA Saturdays will align with other major math days happening all over the world,” McCammon said. Sessions will include guest scientists, demonstrations, hands-on activities and lessons connecting math, environmental science and hazard literacy. Children will learn to read wave and wind trackers, interpret oceanographic data and use early-warning tools commonly relied on by fishers, surfers and emergency personnel.
“A lot of our fishermen and surfers are accessing this information all the time. It is free, and CERCA St. Thomas is going to be showing people what these tools are and where they can access them on a daily basis,” McCammon said.
The new St. Thomas center joins four existing CERCA centers in Puerto Rico and is the first in the U.S. Virgin Islands. The initiative is funded through NOAA and the U.S. Integrated Ocean Observing System, with additional support from partners including the International Tsunami Information Center, the National Weather Service, Caribbean GeoTech Center, and other organizations.
For 2025, McCammon said CERCA St. Thomas will rely largely on infographics, videos and other materials already developed for CERCA sites in Puerto Rico, allowing the program to “hit the ground running.” Beginning in 2026, the museum plans to pursue new grants and partnerships to create content tailored specifically to the Virgin Islands, including local maps, charts and action plans that reflect the territory’s own hazards.
“The long-term goal is to keep building partnerships and resources that really help our children, families, and the wider community learn more,” McCammon said, noting that plans also include offering content in English, Spanish, and Haitian Creole to better serve the territory’s multilingual community.
McCammon said early hazard education is essential because it reduces fear and panic during real emergencies. She said that with practiced knowledge, like knowing evacuation points or how to respond to earthquakes and tsunamis, children and families are far less likely to freeze or react unpredictably
McCammon said the CERCA classroom inside the museum will also serve as a pop-up learning space for school groups, summer camps and other visitors. Staff can open the room during field trips or special visits to introduce students to safety tools and hold guided discussions. In addition to these pop-ups, the museum will host free open-house days to “welcome as many people as possible.”
She emphasized that CERCA St. Thomas and VICM are designed to broaden access for the territory’s parents and children. Free admission for both the grand opening and future CERCA events will help to remove financial barriers. “So many people think everything’s for the tourists, but we are very much here for the locals,” McCammon said, noting that more than 80% of museum visitors in 2024 were local children and families.
Overall, CERCA’s educational programming will cover topics relevant to the Virgin Islands, including coastal erosion, storm surge, hurricane formation, tsunamis, flooding, earthquakes, sargassum, and water safety. Families will learn to interpret vital oceanographic data and understand evacuation routes, safety maps, and the role of local ecosystems like seagrasses, coral reefs, and mangroves in protecting the community. The curriculum also addresses the impacts of native, naturalized, and invasive species on environmental resilience.
McCammon said that by giving the community inclusive, hands-on learning opportunities, CERCA St. Thomas will help residents better understand local environmental risks. “The information and hands-on interactive content that community members can engage with at CERCA will deepen their understanding of local environmental risks and contribute to a more resilient and prepared Virgin Islands,” she said.

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