Cape Argus

‘We will defend our home and our honour’

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WIELDING long sticks and with their faces wrapped in Palestinia­n chequered keffiyeh scarves, young men set out on a night patrol to guard their village in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

Each night, the team gathers at Turmus Ayya in the north of the West Bank, ready to raise the alarm in the event of a raid by Israeli settlers, who have set up bases in outposts around the village.

“We do not intend to attack anyone – we work to defend our people and our village, our home, our land and our honour,” one said, requesting anonymity for fear of arrest by Israeli forces. “These are our weapons – sticks and flashlight­s – and we have nothing but them to defend ourselves,” he said, raising a baton and a powerful electric torch.

Tensions are high, especially after the nearby Palestinia­n town of Huwara came under attack by Israeli settlers on Sunday, hours after two Israeli settlers were shot dead as they drove past.

Hundreds of rampaging settlers set homes and cars ablaze, while a Palestinia­n man was killed in the nearby village of Zaatara.

“After what happened in Huwara, we have become more vigilant than before,” said one of the leaders of the patrol, his face concealed.

The team first formed last year after tensions with the settlers rose following a clash, but they increased patrols after attacks this year, moving around on foot or on off-road buggies. Some carry baseball bats.

“We, the youth, formed guard committees... we take turns with each other to fend off any possible attack,” another said.

Turmus Ayya, home to about 4000 people, many of them Palestinia­n-Americans, has seen a number of recent attacks by settlers.

In recent weeks, a group of settlers were seen coming close to the village, but on spotting the patrol, they retreated.

Excluding Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem, the West Bank is home to about 2.9 million Palestinia­ns as well as an estimated 475000 Jewish settlers, who live in state-approved settlement­s considered illegal under internatio­nal law.

The young men move in groups, monitoring the area from a hilltop to watch for any movement from the settlers on hills across the valley.

Abdul Karim al-Zaghloul, a Palestinia­n-American from Ohio who was visiting family in the village, brought cups of hot tea to the young men on a cold night. “We are ready for any attack, God willing,” another patrol member said.

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