After the Al-Quds Shooting: How Israel’s Measures Are Escalating Tensions

Tuesday, September 09, 2025

SAEDNEWS: The Israeli regime has intensified its campaign of collective punishment across the occupied West Bank, imposing sweeping sanctions on Palestinian communities in the wake of a shooting in Al-Quds (Jerusalem) that took place in retaliation against the regime’s acts of aggression.

After the Al-Quds Shooting: How Israel’s Measures Are Escalating Tensions

Entire towns in the West Bank have been sealed off, streets barricaded, and movement ground to a halt. Israeli forces are mapping homes for demolition — a practice widely condemned as illegal under international humanitarian law.

Israel’s War Minister has vowed “far-reaching and severe consequences,” revoking at least 750 Palestinian work permits, further crippling an already devastated economy. Families of alleged attackers, including fathers and uncles with no involvement in the incidents, are being detained, while work restrictions and civil sanctions are imposed as part of what human rights advocates describe as state-led revenge policies.

In a recent raid, Israeli troops demolished the home of Thabet Masalma, a Palestinian accused of a December shooting, leaving his wife, parents, and three children homeless. Residents of Beit Awwa confronted the troops, facing live fire and tear gas that injured at least two Palestinians.

Human rights group B’Tselem reports 26 punitive demolitions in 2025 alone, displacing over 70 people, a practice critics say amounts to war crimes. In Hebron (Al-Khalil) governorate, arrests and road closures further tighten Israel’s control over the region.

Following Monday’s Al-Quds attack that killed six, Israeli ministers have threatened harsher reprisals, including more home demolitions and possible deportations. Rights groups warn that these measures deepen Palestinian suffering while fueling cycles of resistance.

As the crackdown intensifies, the human cost of collective punishment is becoming impossible to ignore — leaving observers questioning how far the cycle of retaliation and resistance will go.