Israel destroys Amal Slaibi’s West Bank orchard
Israel is destroying West Bank farmland near illegal settlements, like Amal Slaibi's seven-dunam orchard, leaving Palestinian families like hers without income or access to their ancestral land. This
Amal Slaibi, 58, can barely look at the ruins of her family’s orchard in Beit Ummar, a village north of Hebron in the occupied West Bank. Israeli bull
Read Full Story at Al Jazeera →Why This Matters
The destruction of Palestinian farmland in the West Bank isn’t just an economic crisis—it’s a calculated erosion of food sovereignty that could permanently alter the region’s agricultural landscape. For many families, these lands represent generations of cultivation, cultural heritage, and the last bastion of economic autonomy in an increasingly restricted territory. The systematic targeting of orchards and crops underscores a broader strategy to displace rural communities, not just physically, but economically and culturally.
Background Context
The West Bank’s fertile valleys have long been the backbone of Palestinian agriculture, but decades of Israeli settlement expansion and military restrictions have carved the territory into isolated fragments. Under the guise of security or administrative oversight, Israeli authorities have justified the demolition of Palestinian structures—including homes and farmland—while expanding settlements that are deemed illegal under international law. These policies disproportionately affect small-scale farmers like Slaibi, who lack the resources to challenge the system or relocate.
What Happens Next
The immediate fallout will likely see more families abandon farming altogether, shifting toward precarious labor markets or migration in search of survival. International condemnation may slow but won’t halt the demolitions, as Israel’s legal justifications for such actions often rely on convoluted bureaucratic frameworks. Watch for shifts in donor aid or NGO interventions, as well as whether Palestinian Authority responses evolve from protest to more assertive legal or diplomatic measures.
Bigger Picture
This pattern reflects a decades-long trend of territorial consolidation through attrition, where incremental policies—land seizures, permit denials, and now agricultural sabotage—chip away at Palestinian presence. It mirrors tactics used in other conflict zones where economic strangulation precedes forced displacement, raising urgent questions about the long-term viability of a two-state framework. The international community’s muted response suggests a normalization of these practices, further entrenching the status quo.

