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Houses and cars burnt to ashes, sheep killed or stolen, two Palestinians shot dead, and dozens wounded. Last month, Israeli settlers unleashed a wave of violence all over the occupied West Bank.
More than 1,500 settlers attacked al-Mughayyir and a dozen other villages in mid-April. Using the kidnapping and killing of a 14-year-old settler as an excuse, they targeted cars, houses, agricultural tools, and livestock. Attacks are still ongoing, with houses being burnt in Duma and other villages south of Nablus in recent weeks.
âThe situation in al-Mughayyir and other villages is unbearable. The violence has reached levels weâve never witnessed before,â Yasmeen El-Hasan, coordinator of the Union of Agricultural Work Committees (UAWC), a Ramallah-based grassroots organisation helping Palestinian farmers, told °źÂț”ș.
The attacks caused an international outcry, as well as hefty discussions inside Israel. But they quickly found support from a high-standing saviour: Itamar Ben-Gvir, Israelâs infamous far-right minister of national security.
Saying the âpersecutionâ of settlers is âantisemiticâ, Ben-Gvir, who chairs the religious Otzma Yehudit (Jewish Power) party, praised them and promised to defend them, as he often did as a lawyer before becoming part of the government formed by Benjamin Netanyahu in November 2022, the most far right in Israelâs history.
For many Palestinians, the ultranationalist minister is actively encouraging settler violence, becoming one of the most hated figures in the occupied West Bank.
âThe hordes of settlers that swept all over Palestinian villages were emboldened by Ben-Gvir and [Bezalel] Smotrich's ideological and material support of settler militias throughout the West Bank, even more so after 7 October,â El-Hasan said.
After Hamasâ deadly attack on southern Israel, which left 1,200 dead, the Israeli government encouraged the formation and training of defence units for settlements â and has since expanded their role. Ben-Gvir also heads the Israeli border police in the West Bank, known as the Magav.
âThere is no distinction on the ground between the IOF and the settlers, who often attack while wearing army fatigues and are part of the reserves," El-Hasan said,Ìęusing the IOF acronym (Israeli Occupation Forces)Ìęin reference to the Israeli army.
She added that in some places, settlers have set up roadblocks and checkpoints, muchÌęlikeÌętheÌęIsraeli army.
"Since their ascent to power, Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich have been shifting Israeli politics towards the far right"
Collaboration between soldiers and settlers has been recorded by Jewish activists in the West Bank, who also face the wrath of Ben-Gvirâs policies.
âBecause of him, we are far more at risk of violence and arrest than before,â Alma Shibolet, an Israeli-Jewish anti-occupation activist, told °źÂț”ș.
The activist has spent most of her time since 7 October in the South Hebron Hills, protecting Palestinian shepherds and villagers from settler attacks, army raids, and police detention. Doing so, she has faced physical violence and sexual harassment from both settlers and soldiers, who have called her a âself-hating Jewâ and a âslutâ.
Many of her fellow activists have recently been arrested and banned from the West Bank as Ben-Gvir formed a new police force tasked with pursuing âanarchists who harm state securityâ after a hearing at a Knesset sub-commission in March.
Insulting other Israeli politicians, repressing Jewish peace activists, and inciting hatred against Palestinians are only a few things Ben-Gvir is infamous for, as his more than 50 criminal charges and 2007 conviction for incitement to racism and supporting a terrorist organisation suggest.
Born in 1976 to a conservative Mizrahi family, he became part of Kahanist youth parties and organisations, a right-wing religious Zionist movement founded by Rabbi Meir Kahane. Affirming the religious right of Jews to all of Palestine, it advocates the expulsion or killing of Palestinians from the Holy Land as a messianic mission.
As a teenager, Ben-Gvir opposed the Oslo Accords agreed by then-Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin â and even stole an ornament from his carâs hood, threatening to âget to himâ just a few weeks before his actual assassination by a far-right Jewish gunman.
Ben-Gvir soon then began a tumultuous career as a lawyer, defending many violent religious settlers. In parallel, Ben-Gvir became known for his controversial TV appearances, slamming his Palestinian, LGBTQIA+, and liberal opponents.
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âThe media absolutely loves him. If heâs in front of the camera, you know heâll say something wild and offensive - and get the best ratings,â Ido Dembin, a lawyer and executive director of Molad, a liberal Israeli think-tank, said.
Itamar Ben-Gvir has, since then, become a symbol of Israelâs violent far right. His most famous controversies include installing his partyâs office in the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood of occupied East Jerusalem and repeatedly visiting the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, known to Jews as the Temple Mount.
For years, he was well-known for hanging a portrait of Baruch Goldstein, the Kahanist terrorist who killed 29 Muslim worshippers in the 1994 Ibrahimi Mosque massacre in Hebron, on the wall of his home, calling him his âheroâ.
"There is no distinction on the ground between the Israeli army and the settlers, who often attack while wearing army fatigues and are part of the reserves"
Ben-Gvirâs popularity rose while that of Netanyahuâs was sinking, paying the price of his entanglement in corruption lawsuits. "'Bibi' became a pariah for potential centre-left coalition partners, so he saved his position by forging an alliance with far-right politicians such as Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich,â a settler who became minister of finance and of settlement affairs, Dembin explained.
During the 2022 elections, Ben-Gvirâs and Smotrichâs political parties joined forces and won 14Ìę seats â with both becoming important ministers in Netanyahuâs government.
âTheir power far exceeds their actual share of votes and popularity,â Dembin said. âBut Netanyahu needs them, and they have nothing to loseâ.
Since their ascent to power, Ben-Gvir and Smotrich have been shifting Israeli politics towards the far right, analysts say. âThey are awful statesmen, but they are managing to shape Israeli politics to suit their own followers by pursuing âtoughâ security policies,â Dembin explains.
Ben-Gvir has politicised the police âmore than any other minister before himâ, he believes. The minister regularly appoints right-wing police officers, gives aggressive instructions to anti-riot police during weekly anti-government demonstrations in Tel Aviv, and policemen.
âHe is shaping a police force that swears allegiance to him and shares his ideology,â Dembin said.
Ben-Gvirâs other political actions include handing out 100,000 gun licenses and 10,000 assault rifles to Israelis and advocating for re-colonising Gaza.
In a similar vein, finance and settlements minister Smotrich has been pursuing the objective of expanding the West Bank settler population to one million by 2050. Recently, he has moved to seize in the West Bank and build in East Jerusalem alone.
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âAs one of the highest-ranking ministers of the cabinet, he has channelled over 700 billion shekels to promote settlements,â Dembin said. âHis political plan, called Definitive Victory, means nothing less than the total annexation of the West Bank. Palestinians can either accept this, leave, or be killed in combat,â he added.
âIt is essential to remember that Ben-Gvirâs and Smotrichâs motivation is religious and that they use the argument of security for the sake of attracting disappointed Netanyahu voters - whereas their policies have not in fact proven to be better for Israel'sÌęsecurity.â
At the same time, they exert a strong influence on a flailing Netanyahu. Both Ben-Gvir and Smotrich have threatened to leave the government if Israel didnât launch a large assault on Rafah or if it accepted a hostage deal with Hamas.
"Smotrich and Ben-Gvir do draw criticism from some liberal Israelis, as they are far-right and very explicit with their genocidal intent. But settler colonialism is settler colonialism, regardless of how it is packaged"
Despite their sudden rise to fame, Ben-Gvir and Smotrichâs power in the government remains limited. âTheyâre not running the show, and even got sidelined and excluded from the war council,â says Nimrod Goren, an analyst at the Middle East Institute.
âThere is a strong pushback against them, and most Israelis still donât support them,â he explained.
"Nevertheless, their current ministerial positions empower them and their supporters, and their actions negatively impact Israel's regional ties, democratic nature, and social cohesion."
From General Gadi Eisenkot to Chief of Staff Benny Gantz and opposition leader Yair Lapid, many high-ranking figures have slammed Smotrich and Ben-Gvir over various controversies.
They also draw fire from Israeli civil society. A legal petition from the government, while Israeli newspaper Haaretz called for the as finance minister over his ârepeated calls for genocideâ against Palestinians.
Smotrich also came under direct criticism from Bidenâs government after granting recognition to 68 West Bank settler outposts, which are illegal under international law. Such policies are , State Department deputy spokesperson Vedant Patel said two weeks ago.
In recent months, the US, EU, and several other countries have sanctioned Israeli settlers close to Ben-Gvir, accusing them of being particularly violent against Palestinians.
âBen-Gvirâs and Smotrichâs surroundings are being delegitimised internationally, the sanctions are getting closer to them gradually,âÌęGorenÌęadded.
The impact of such international sanctions, however, has been questioned by Israeli and Palestinian peace activists.
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âOf course, the real problem is not Ben-Gvir and Smotrich, but Israelâs existence as a settler colonial state,â Alma Shibolet, the Jewish anti-occupation activist, said.
âThey merely state the obvious and make the horrors of the occupation more visible,â she added. âWhile it is true that they make the situation far more dangerous for both Palestinians and Jewish activists, we have to target the whole systemâ.
She says she is âscaredâ by Israelâs turn to the far right. âThis place has never been a real democracy, but it is getting more authoritarian by the day.â
Palestinians have been experiencing this extremist shift on the ground for decades. âBen-Gvir and Smotrich embolden settler violence, but settler colonialism is inherent to Israelâs foundation,â UAWCâs Yasmeen El-Hasan said.
âSmotrich and Ben-Gvir do draw criticism from some liberal Israelis, as they are far-right and very explicit with their genocidal intent. But settler colonialism is settler colonialism, regardless of how it is packaged,â she explained.
âBut this violence has never been hidden to us, Palestinians â and the recent increase in intensity has very real consequencesÌęforÌęus.â
Philippe Pernot is a French-German photojournalist living in Beirut. Covering anarchist, environmentalist, and queer social movements, he is now the Lebanon correspondent for Frankfurter Rundschau and an editor for various international media.Ìę
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