Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Beasts of Babylon on rampage in West Bank


Middle East Monitor ·


Germany and Jordan expressed alarm Tuesday over escalating violence by Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank, calling on Israeli authorities to hold perpetrators accountable as attacks against Palestinian farmers reach unprecedented levels, Anadolu reports.

German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul told a joint news conference with his Jordanian counterpart Ayman Safadi that extremist settler violence has intensified dramatically in recent weeks, particularly during the olive harvest season.

"The violent acts of extremist settlers have reached a shocking scale there in recent weeks. They prevent olive farmers from harvesting, they devastate entire plantations, they set cars and houses on fire," Wadephul said.

"These settlers are openly pursuing the goal of driving Palestinians out of their communities. The fact that the Israeli government has clearly condemned these acts several times is the right signal. We welcome that and expect those responsible to be held accountable," he added.

Wadephul reiterated Germany's support for a negotiated two-state solution to the Middle East conflict and emphasized that Gaza, the West Bank, and East Jerusalem belong together and would form the basis for a future Palestinian state.

Echoing Wadephul's concerns, Jordanian Foreign Minister Safadi said violence by Israeli settlers has escalated in recent weeks, with olive groves, properties, and homes of Palestinians attacked and destroyed daily in the West Bank. He criticized Israeli authorities for failing to take concrete action to stop the violence, despite publicly condemning it.





10 comments:

  1. I wonder how he is doing....?

    The Islamic preacher Zakir Naik got into a taxi in London and said to the driver: 😲

    “My brother, turn off the radio, please, because as the Holy Qur’an says, I’m not allowed to listen to music, since in the Prophet’s time there was no Western music, which is the music of the unbelievers.”

    The taxi driver kindly turned off the radio, stopped the taxi, and opened the door for him.

    Zakir asked him: “My brother, what are you doing?”

    The taxi driver politely replied:
    “In the Prophet’s time, there were no taxis, no bombs, no loudspeakers in mosques, no suicide attacks. So be quiet, get out, and wait for a camel to pass.”

    The story isn’t meant as a theological debate but as a humorous way to highlight the irony of rigid literalism when applied selectively in modern life

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    1. weirdies r everywhere, especially those religious typed.

      Mfer, haven't u ever heard of those from the Haredi of Judaism?

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  2. Pay For Slay Continues. Bunuh Isaac dapat pencen.

    Meanwhile in Gaza, Harmass degil. Tak mau letak senjata.

    Albo & Penny, so how?

    Israel’s cabinet was warned that Hamas is rebuilding fast and regaining near full control of Gaza. Officials said 13 of 25 municipalities are back up and running, police and checkpoints have reappeared, and key infrastructure is being repaired as Hamas restores its grip on the population.

    Senior IDF commanders said Israel cannot ignore the trend and must craft its own plan to demilitarize Gaza, since the current U.S. proposal has not been addressing this problem.

    https://x.com/osint613/status/1993662089534099521?s=46

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    1. wakakakaka… zionist fart for ur c&p thrill!

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  3. The joke is that western countries that “recognize” Palastin can’t find diplomats willing to go there. They want to be in Jerusalem or Tel Aviv.

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    1. likening to addicts seeking high or cult member rushing for their utopia.

      Delete
  4. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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  5. facts about
    @destinationXIX - nope

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