Observers: West Bank Violence Risks Spiraling Out of Control

The West Bank is witnessing some of the worst violence between Israelis and Palestinians in years. It’s an explosive mix, observers say, as the Palestinian Authority appears unable to rein in militants while the Israeli military is doing little or nothing to stop attacks by extremist Jewish settlers.

Violence in the West Bank has sharply escalated in recent days. Palestinian militias have attacked Israeli troops and Jewish settlers, while the Israeli military has used drones and helicopter gunships to kill Palestinians.

Extremist Jewish settlers have rampaged through Palestinian towns, setting homes and cars ablaze. The soaring violence now seen over past months has drawn alarm from the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Turk, who warned that the “violence risks spiraling out of control.”

Mideast analyst Bruce Riedel, an emeritus non-resident fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington, told VOA he believes a third intifada — or Palestinian uprising — against Israeli occupation is now under way. The first intifada raged from 1987 to 1993, and the second began in 2000.

“The level of violence in the northern West Bank, but also in other places, in Jerusalem, inside Israel in the Arab community, and now in the Druze community in the Golan, is much higher than normal,” said Riedel. “One of the most disturbing elements is we see guns are now available in places like Nabulus and Jenin. In the past, it was very, very difficult for Palestinians to get access to weapons. Now we are seeing it is a more frequent occurrence.”

Extremist Jewish settlers have rampaged through Palestinian towns, setting homes and cars ablaze. The soaring violence now seen over past months has drawn alarm from the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Turk, who warned that the “violence risks spiraling out of control.”

Mideast analyst Bruce Riedel, an emeritus non-resident fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington, told VOA he believes a third intifada — or Palestinian uprising — against Israeli occupation is now under way. The first intifada raged from 1987 to 1993, and the second began in 2000.

“The level of violence in the northern West Bank, but also in other places, in Jerusalem, inside Israel in the Arab community, and now in the Druze community in the Golan, is much higher than normal,” said Riedel. “One of the most disturbing elements is we see guns are now available in places like Nabulus and Jenin. In the past, it was very, very difficult for Palestinians to get access to weapons. Now we are seeing it is a more frequent occurrence.”

“The situation is ripe for further descent into chaos,” said Riedel. “You have an extremely rightwing Israeli government, members of whom are calling for large-scale military operations in Jenin, the use of air power, and you have a Palestinian leadership which is beyond weak now.”

A Palestinian national security expert Zakaria al-Qaq told The New York Times that there appears to be “total involvement between Israel and the small Palestinian factions, and the Palestinian Authority is outside of the game, on the margins, or not really there at all.”

Hanan Ashrawi, once the official Palestinian spokesperson in the Middle East peace process, told the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace recently that the language of the two-state solution — envisioning a Palestinian state established alongside Israel — “has become increasing irrelevant.”

“We are at the end of an era now both in Palestine and Israel,” she said. “We are undergoing a situation of serious transition. All the previous assumptions have been proven to be wrong and even the signed agreements have not been honored but have been used to acerbate the conflict or Israel’s control rather than to remove the occupation or end up with self-determination for Palestine.”

Ashrawi criticizes Israel’s actions undermining Palestinian aspirations but also the Palestinian leadership’s mismanagement and fragmentation.

Source: Voice of America

PSD launches summer-related guidelines, measures

The Public Security Department (PSD) on Monday launched a set of guidelines and preventive measures to be followed in the summer, especially with the start of official holidays and picnicking seasons. The PSD urged the public to follow proper behavior to preserve their safety and avoid wrong practices that may pose a threat to lives and properties.

Source: Jordan News Agency

Newspapers Review: Israeli settler terrorism in Ramallah-area villages focus of dailies

The three Palestinian Arabic dailies published today continued to focus on the government and army-backed Israeli settler terrorism in the occupied West Bank, particularly Ramallah-area villages. ‘Settlers continue in their terrorism and the occupation deploys two more brigades in the West Bank,’ said the main front-page story headline in al-Hayat al-Jadida daily. Al-Ayyam daily had more or less a similar headline for its main front-page story and said that the settlers continue setting fires in Turmus Ayya. The third daily, al-Quds, also said in its main front-page headline that Israel is going to boost its forces in the West Bank with two more brigades. Al-Quds, al-Ayyam and al-Hayat al-Jadida also said that the Biden Administration has canceled decisions by former US President Donald Trump to finance projects and scientific cooperation with settlements. Al-Quds said Israeli officials are warning that settler terrorism in the occupied territories could lead to the pursuit of Israeli military commanders in international courts. Al-Ayyam said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu intends to continue building in settlements at a large scale. It also said that the two far-right and fascist Israeli cabinet ministers, Ben Gvir and Smotrich, rejected criticism by the Israeli military of settler terrorism. It said Israel may allow Gazans to travel to Turkey through Ramon airport, in southern Israel. Al-Hayat al-Jadida said the Palestinian foreign ministry has called on the International Criminal Court to end its silence in light of an admission by Israeli officials of settler terrorism. The dailies also reported on the pilgrimage to Makkah, the wars in Sudan and Ukraine, and the end of the conflict in Russia.

Source: En – Palestine news & Information Agency – WAFA

Edraak, Crescent Petroleum launch Career Compass Pathway to empower youth

Edraak, the Arab World’s leading nonprofit platform for online skilling and training, has expanded its partnership with Crescent Petroleum, the oldest and largest privately held oil and gas company in the Middle East, to launch the Career Compass Pathway aimed at helping up to 1 million young people to find better jobs and prepare for a new world of work. The Career Compass Pathway will deliver four online modules, which include Digital Literacy, CV Writing, Job Search Skills, and Interview Skills, focusing on the essential job skills for future success in the workplace: how to stand out as a candidate, how to interview, and how to thrive at work. The Arabic-language courses, which were launched today, are free of charge to all users who register, and those who successfully complete the four courses will receive a certificate of completion. Youth unemployment in MENA reaches 30% in some parts of the region, the highest anywhere in the world. It has emerged as the leading challenge facing governments and policymakers in the region, and the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic have only exacerbated the situation for new entrants into the job market. The Career Compass Pathway aims to equip young people with the skills to enable them to succeed in the modern workplace. Industry research has highlighted that the single biggest impediment to youth employment is the soft skills required in modern office life. Crescent Petroleum has long invested resources in outreach efforts across the region to empower young people and to close the skills gap many of them face in the new world of work. Crescent Petroleum and Edraak aim to reach one million enrollments with the Career Compass Pathway to enable young people across the MENA region to reach their full potential. The Edraak Career Readiness Program launched by the partners in 2020 saw more than 400,000 registrants for courses in basic office IT, English for the Workplace, and overall professional workplace presentation and appearance. Majid Jafar, CEO of Crescent Petroleum said: “We have long been focused on enabling the region’s young people to grow and reach their full potential. This program of online courses aims to help 1 million young people across the Arab World to become more employable, find better work and improve their future.” Bassem Saad, Chairman of Edraak, expressed pride for the enduring educational partnership between Crescent Petroleum and Edraak in support of youth employment needs, “Linkages in skills development and the requirements of the private sector are a critical bridge to creating a pathway from education to employment. Edraak is thrilled to see the successes of Arab youth completing this program with a competitive set of high-demand skills.” The Edraak Career Compass can be found at https://www.edraak.org/programs/specialization/cr101-vv3/

Source: Jordan News Agency

Minister receives report on journalism graduates training project

Minister of Government Communication and government spokesperson Faisal Shboul received on Monday from Director General of the Royal Health Awareness Society (RHAS) Amal Arefej a report on a health media training joint project for journalism and media graduates. Shboul emphasized that the project is part of a number of programs that the Ministry of Government Communication is working on to develop the media environment and enhance the flow of information to the public and the local media, pointing out that this project provided fully paid theoretical and practical training opportunities in 12 media institutions for 41 graduates of journalism and media. The project, he indicated, achieved important results, the most prominent of which was the employment of a quarter of those graduates in various media institutions, in addition to the production of 352 visual, written, audio and digital health media materials. Shboul hailed the Jordan Media Institute, the academic partner in designing the project, as well as the donors, including the International Diabetes Federation, the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund, Radio Netherlands Worldwide, and the International Relief Committee, commending the role of local media institutions that hosted the trainees over a period of six months. Highlighting the importance of the partnership between the RHAS, an initiative of Her Majesty Queen Rania Al Abdullah, and the Ministry of Government Communication, Arefej said she was looking forward to designing other programs to enhance the work of media and health journalism in the coming period. Shboul also received, during his meeting with Arefej, an evaluation study on designing a project to train journalism and media graduates in the field of health media and its most prominent results and recommendations offered to the relevant authorities. The study showed the extent of the benefit achieved by measuring the impact of theoretical and practical training on the participants and the extent of their benefit in developing competencies, skills and strengths, which can be used to design future training programs targeting journalism and media graduates.

Source: Jordan News Agency

Trade deficit down by 2.7pct in first tertile of 2023

Jordan’s trade deficit, which is the difference between the value of imports and total exports, in the first tertile of 2023 slightly dropped by 2.7 percent to JD2.94 billion against JD3.023 billion in the same period of 2022, according to official figures released Monday. Total exports also rose by 2.3 percent in the January-April period of 2023 standing at JD2.872 billion from JD2.809 billion in the corresponding period of last year, the monthly report by the Department of Statistics (DoS), which covers foreign trade, revealed. The Kingdom’s national exports picked up by 4 percent to JD2.682 billion in the first tertile of 2023, compared with JD2.579 billion during the same period of last year, according to the data. The value of re-exports stood at JD190 million by the end of April, constituting a 17.2 percent drop, compared to JD230 million in the same period of last year. As for imports, their value amounted to JD5.813 billion, a minor decrease of 0.3 percent compared to the same period last year, which stood at JD5.832 billion. According to the report, total exports in April 2023 declined by 11.8 percent amounting to JD652.6 million from the figure reported during the same month of last year. Similarly, national exports in April dropped by 11.9 percent to JD605.8 million compared with the figure reported during the same month of last year. The value of re-exports was at JD46.8 million in April of the current year, constituting an 11 percent drop compared to the same period of last year, while imports amounted to JD1.299 billion, a decrease of 16.5 percent compared to the same month last year. The trade balance deficit stood at JD646.5 million, decreasing in April 2023 by 20.8 percent compared to the same month of last year.

Source: Jordan News Agency

Israeli bulldozer level large tract of Palestinian land south of Nablus

Israeli occupation bulldozers Monday evening leveled large tracts of Palestinian land belonging to the villagers of Qaryout, south of the occupied West Bank city of Nablus, according to a local activist. Ghassan Daghlas, who monitors Israeli settlements in the northern West Bank, said that seven Israeli military machinery razed large tracts of the villagers land to make room for the expansion of the nearby encroaching colonial settlements of Eli and Shilo. Israel uses the Jewish nationalist name ‘Judea and Samaria’ to refer to the occupied West Bank to reinforce its bogus claims to the territory and to give them a veneer of historical and religious legitimacy. There are almost over 800,000 Israeli settlers living in colonial settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Israel’s nation-state law that passed last July stated that building and strengthening the settlements is a ‘national interest.’

Source: En – Palestine news & Information Agency – WAFA

Cancer-stricken Palestinian patient denied early release from Israeli imprisonment

Cancer-stricken prisoner Walid Daqqa was today denied early release from Israeli imprisonment. The Israeli Occupation Parole Committee rejected an attorney’s request to grant Daqqah, 61, early parole, claiming that the ‘Prevention of Terrorism’ law applies to him – even though his actual sentence expired on 24 March 2023. The committtee claimed that Walid Daqqah has no right to request early parole. His legal team will study the decision and appeal it to the Central Court. In protest of the deprivation of his right to communicate with his family, Daqqah returned his medicine to the administration of the Israeli Ramleh Prison clinic. Daqqah rejected the prison administration’s delays and procrastination in making arrangements for communication with his family, despite his critical health condition. He also refused that arrangement for communication with his family should come at the expense of his fellow prisoners. According to the Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association (Addameer), Daqqa, a 61-year-old Palestinian writer, activist, intellectual, and political prisoner from the Palestinian city of Baqa Al-Gharbiya, colonized in 1948, was diagnosed with a rare form of bone marrow cancer in 2022 and has been in dire need of urgent medical attention since then. Walid is one of 19 Palestinians who have spent more than 30 years in Israeli occupation prisons and one of 23 Palestinians who have been incarcerated since before the Oslo Accords came into effect in 1991. Doctors, including Israeli physicians, have insinuated that his worsening health is a result of the Israeli Prison Service (IPS)’s systematic practice of deliberate medical neglect, including a recent denial of emergency hospital transfer after Walid suffered from a blood-clot-induced stroke in Askalan prison in February 2023. He was finally moved to Barzilai Medical Center, 11 days after surviving the stroke, following the recommendation of the Askalan prison doctor.

Source: En – Palestine news & Information Agency – WAFA

Weather: Hot with a slight drop in temperature, which remains 2°C above the normal average

Weather today in Palestine is relatively hot with a slight drop in temperature, which stays 2°C above the seasonal average, according to the Palestinian Meteorological Department (PMD). Winds are westerly to northwesterly, light to moderate, and sea waves are low. Temperature in the capital, Jerusalem, and Bethlehem is expected to reach a high of 29°C and a low of 18°C and in Ramallah and Hebron a high of 28°C and a low of 17°C. In Jericho, the Dead Sea, and the Jordan Valley temperature is expected to reach a high of 40°C and a low of 25°C, while it is expected to reach a high of 30 and a low of 22°C in Gaza and the coastal areas. Temperature rises on Tuesday approaching 3°C above the seasonal average, and again on Wednesday, the first day of the 4-day Muslim holiday, Eid Al-Adha, approaching 4°C above the average. A slight drop in temperature is expected for Thursday, which nevertheless remains 3°C above the seasonal average, said the PMD warning against exposure to direct sunlight for a long period and setting fire in areas with dry grass.

Source: En – Palestine news & Information Agency – WAFA

Two Palestinians sustain injuries in settler attack south of Nablus

Two Palestinians Monday evening sustained injuries in a settler attack near Duma village, south of the occupied West Bank city of Nablus, according to an activist. Ghassan Daghlas, who monitors Israeli settlements in the northern West Bank, said that Israeli supremacist settlers hurled stones at Palestinian vehicles travelling on the outskirts of the village, smashing the windshields of a vehicle and injuring two of the passengers. The casualties, both residents of Qusra village, southeast of Nablus, were treated at the scene. Meanehile, another group of settlers chased a Palestinian vehicle close to Jamma’in town, southwest of Nablus, and spewed pepper spray in the faces of the passengers, causing painful burning of the eyes. Settler violence against Palestinians and their property is routine in the West Bank and is rarely prosecuted by Israeli authorities. Settler violence includes property and mosque arsons, stone-throwing, uprooting of crops and olive trees, attacks on vulnerable homes, among others. There are over 700,000 Israeli settlers living in colonial settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

Source: En – Palestine news & Information Agency – WAFA

JCI: Imports hinder local woodworking manufacturing counterparts

Jordan’s woodworking and furniture sector is facing a lack of protection against foreign imports, which have reached significant levels despite the competitiveness of local products in terms of quality and prices, according to the Jordan Chamber of Industry (JCI). A report obtained by the Jordan News Agency (Petra) on Monday revealed that foreign products accounted for 43 percent of the country’s furniture and woodworking market, posing a major challenge to the competitiveness of the national product both locally and regionally. The woodworking and furniture sector is considered one of the most important industrial sectors in Jordan, closely linked to the construction and urban sectors. Its products are utilized in restaurants, hotels, schools, hospitals, and various economic activities. The report highlighted that the sector is labor-intensive, employing 8,500 workers, with the majority being Jordanians, constituting over 90 percent of the total workforce. The sector comprises 2,140 establishments spread across the kingdom, with an investment volume of nearly JD300 million. In terms of productivity, the sector is recognized as one of the leading sectors, characterized by high added value and skilled labor with artistic and creative abilities. Its production amounts to around JD321 million, representing 1.8 percent of the total industrial production in Jordan, with an added value accounting for 40 percent of the total production. Exports from the woodworking and furniture sector reached approximately JD34 million in 2022, contributing 0.45 percent to the kingdom’s total industrial exports. The sector’s products reached more than 70 countries worldwide, encompassing over 60 different product types. Saudi Arabia ranked as the largest importer of Jordanian furniture products, accounting for 31.7 percent, followed by Iraq with 13 percent of the sector’s total exports. The report emphasized that the woodworking and furniture sector is a highly skilled craft sector, with over 95 percent of establishments being craft-based. Skilled labor plays a crucial role, characterized by high skills, precision, and creativity, contributing to the sector’s excellence and enhanced competitiveness in local and international markets. Initially, the furniture industry in Jordan started with small workshops, but it has expanded to include a chain of large-scale production facilities meeting a significant portion of the local market’s needs and catering to export markets. Additionally, the sector is interconnected with other sectors, providing a rich environment for investment and entrepreneurship. The report highlighted that the furniture industry in the kingdom keeps pace with the latest designs and trends in targeted markets. New designs and techniques are developed to satisfy consumer preferences, incorporating the latest technologies and advanced equipment to meet international quality standards. Moreover, the sector utilizes high-quality wood and raw materials, enabling Jordanian products to enter the export market. The sector faces several challenges, according to the report, including issues with importing raw materials, insufficient availability of resources to support the production process, and high production costs, particularly energy expenses, which account for 60 percent of the sector’s total production volume. Other challenges include the absence of financing programs and incentives specifically targeting the sector, as well as the lack of advanced marketing and promotion programs and systems. These factors significantly limit the product’s access to international markets, alongside complexities related to registration and multiple regulatory authorities. However, the report also highlighted several potentials and opportunities for the sector in foreign markets, estimating the value of untapped export opportunities at around $31 million in various countries worldwide. North America has emerged as a promising market for Jordan’s woodworking and furniture sector, offering clear export opportunities. The demand for high-quality and distinctive furniture designs in North America presents a significant avenue for Jordanian exporters to capitalize on. To penetrate foreign markets effectively, the report recommends that Jordanian furniture manufacturers explore partnerships and collaborations with local distributors and retailers. Establishing strong networks and distribution channels will facilitate the introduction of Jordanian products to a broader customer base. Additionally, the report urged that participation in trade exhibitions and specialized fairs focused on furniture and interior design can serve as platforms to showcase the sector’s capabilities and attract potential buyers. Addressing the challenge of high production costs is also crucial, by exploring renewable energy options and implementing energy-efficient practices to reduce costs and bolster the sector’s competitiveness in the global market.

Source: Jordan News Agency

Parliament Speaker congratulates Djiboutian counterpart

Parliament Speaker Yahya al-Rai’ sent on Sunday a congratulatory cable to Speaker of the National Assembly of Djibouti Dileita Mohamed Dileita.

In the cable, al-Rai’ expressed his congratulations to Dileita on the occasion of his country’s National Day.

Source: Yemen News Agency