West Bank: settler attacks on Christian village
The two most senior church leaders in the Holy Land on July 14 toured the Christian Palestinian town of Taybeh in the West Bank, which has been the scene of repeated attacks by Israeli settlers in recent weeks. In a joint statement, the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem, Theophilos III, and Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Pierbattista Pizzaballa, called the settler attacks a threat to Christian heritage, and demanded an investigation into the failure of Israeli authorities to respond to the ongoing assaults. Taybeh, the biblical Ephraim, has three churches—Greek Orthodox, Roman Catholic and Melkite—whose pastors have issued an joint appeal calling on Israeli authorities to prevent further settler violence. They charged that the violence—including arson attacks that have threatened the Byzantine-era Church of Al-Khader (St. George)—has often taken place in the presence of passive Israeli soldiers. The settlers have also damaged the olive groves that are Taybeh's primary source of income, and are preventing farmers from accessing and working their lands. (VaticanNews, ToI, Al Jazeera)
Hebron 'emirate' offers to recognize Israel
According to a July 5 report in the Wall Street Journal, local Sheikh Wadee' al-Jaabari, AKA Abu Sanad has delivered a letter to Israeli authorities proposing that Hebron secede from the Palestinian Authority and form a tribal-led emirate.
The group pledged recognition of Israel as a Jewish state under the Abraham Accords. In exchange, they requested economic incentives such as increased permits for Palestinian workers. Other Hebron sheikhs and the PA quickly repudiated the idea. (TNA)
This appears to mirror claims that Israel is grooming the Abu Shabab clan in Gaza as an alternative to the Hamas leadership.