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Arab states condemn Israel as it expands control over occupied West Bank

France 24 04:01 PM UTC Mon February 09, 2026 Business
Arab states condemn Israel as it expands control over occupied West Bank

Saudi Arabia and other regional states on Monday condemned Israel's measures to extend its control over the occupied West Bank. Israel announced Sunday evening that its security cabinet had approved a series of decisions that would make it easier for settlers to buy land in the Palestinian territory occupied by Israel since 1967.

Issued on: 09/02/2026 - 17:01

By: FRANCE 24 A Palestinian woman ushers her children away from a group of Israeli soldiers during a weekly settlers' tour in Hebron in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, January 24, 2026. © Mussa Qawasma, Reuters Saudi Arabia, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates led regional states on Monday in condemning Israel's move to ease settlement expansion and widen its powers in the West Bank, a step critics said went in the direction of annexing occupied land.

Sunday's decisions by Israel's security cabinet will make it easier for Jewish settlers to buy land ​in the West Bank and give Israeli authorities more power to act in areas supposedly under full Palestinian control, two senior Israeli ministers said.

One of them, ‍ultra-nationalist Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, said in announcing the decisions that the government would "continue to kill the idea of a Palestinian state".

A joint statement by foreign ministers of Middle Eastern and some other Muslim countries, including Egypt and ​Turkey, denounced the decisions as a violation of international law that would undermine the vision of a two-state solution as well ​as stability in the region.

They said the moves meant to entrench Israeli settlement of the West Bank, displacing Palestinians and imposing unlawful Israeli sovereignty there. Annexing the territory has long been a priority of far-right parties in Netanyahu's coalition.

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Most nations have long backed the creation of a Palestinian state alongside Israel as the best way to resolve the generations-old conflict and see the West Bank, which Israel has occupied since 1967, as the largest part of that future state.

Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz and Smotrich issued a joint statement explaining the decisions of ‍the five-member security cabinet, which were not published in full.

The security cabinet decided to repeal a law dating from Jordan's control of the West Bank before 1967 to make land registries public rather than confidential, and to remove ​a requirement for a permit from a civil administration office.

They said these moves would make it easier for Jews to purchase land in the West Bank. Hagit Ofran from the Israeli settlement watchdog group Peace Now said the decision was barred by international law and represented a step towards annexation of the West ‌Bank.

"The decision to allow every Israeli the right to buy land in the West Bank without government approval, without inspection, is also another way of saying it's normal life. It's not occupied territories, it's like part of Israel," she said.

Read moreUN accuses Israel of 'severe segregation and discrimination' in West Bank 'apartheid'

Annexation is opposed by US President Donald Trump, who last year said he would not allow Israel to carry out such a step.

"It's not going to happen," Trump, who is expecting Netanyahu at the White House for a meeting on Wednesday, said in September.

Katz and Smotrich also said the government had decided to expand monitoring and enforcement actions regarding water offences, damage to archaeological sites and environmental hazards to areas A and B of the West Bank.

Under the Oslo interim peace accords of 1993, Area A was designated as under security control of the Palestinian Authority and Area B as under joint control with Israel. Most of the West Bank became Area C under full Israeli security control.

Those changes could allow the Israeli military to carry out demolitions of Palestinian ‍property and prevent Palestinian development not only in Area C but throughout the West Bank, Peace Now said in a statement.

In Hebron, a West Bank city with extensive archaeological remains and a significant ‌Israeli settler community, Palestinians voiced dismay ​at the decisions.

"It becomes easier to confiscate land, easier and faster to expand settlements and easier to demolish Palestinian homes," said Issa Amr, who heads an organisation in Hebron called Youth Against Settlements.

(FRANCE 24 with Reuters)

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