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'I am the police' Life under brutal rule of a West Bank settler
The Guardian
|September 09, 2024
'Call me Yakov," the burly, red-bearded settler told the Palestinian villagers who lived in his shadow. They should, it was understood, consider him their mukhtar, their chief, mayor and sheriff.
 It was only after he was singled out for sanctions by the US government last week that they learned his real name: Yitzhak Levi Filant.
On paper, Filant is merely the security coordinator (ravshatz) of the Yitzhar settlement, perched on a West Bank hilltop south of Nablus overlooking a string of ancient Palestinian villages strung out on the steep slopes below.
However, with the frequent and arbitrary use of force, he has made himself a warlord of the whole Jabal Salman valley. He has stood out from a phalanx of brutal settler bosses to earn himself the title of "specially designated national" from the US Treasury and State Department, for "malign activities outside the scope of his authority" - blacklisted and banned from receiving funds from Americans.
The citation against him last month mentioned an incident in February this year when "he led a group of armed settlers to set up roadblocks and conduct patrols to pursue and attack Palestinians in their lands and forcefully expel them from their lands".
This was just a single sample drawn from a regular pattern of intimidation which has continued up to the imposition of sanctions on 28 August. A week earlier, armed men had fired teargas into the football field of Burin high school, while children were playing.
"We haven't come here for more than a week because we are afraid the children will get injured," said Ghassan Najjar, the head of an agricultural cooperative. "We can't take responsibility for that." Najjar was speaking near a low stone wall at the back of the pitch, watched intently by armed men in a concrete observation post 100 metres up the hillside.
This story is from the September 09, 2024 edition of The Guardian.
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