Dozens of Israeli settlers launched arson attacks targeting a Palestinian warehouse, a Bedouin village, and farmland in the north of the occupied West Bank on Tuesday.
Several Palestinians were injured.
The incidents were the latest in a recent surge in settler violence coinciding with the olive harvest season, when Palestinians head to their agricultural land around towns and villages.
It comes just after the UN's humanitarian office said the number of violent attacks by settlers last month was the highest since it began collecting figures nearly 20 years ago.
Israel has built about 160 settlements housing 700,000 Jews since it occupied the West Bank and East Jerusalem - land Palestinians want, along with Gaza, for a hoped-for future state - during the 1967 Middle East war. An estimated 3.3 million Palestinians live alongside them.
These settlements are illegal under international law.
Footage from Tuesday shows dozens of masked men on a hillside east of Tulkarm. A Palestinian warehouse in Beit Lid was attacked, with lorries set on fire.
Tents can be seen ablaze in the Bedouin village of Deir Sharaf, with the sound of women shouting in the background.
Palestinian Authority Minister Muayyad Shaaban, the head of the Wall and Settlement Resistance Commission, stated that the attacks were part of a campaign to impose a hostile environment through intimidation and terror.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) reported that troops went to the scene to disperse the confrontation using riot dispersal means and apprehended several Israeli civilians.
Israeli police stated that four suspects were arrested.
In a post on X, Israeli President Isaac Herzog labeled the events as shocking and serious, condemning the violence against civilians and soldiers.
The recent wave of violence has drawn significant attention, with the UN reporting over 260 settler attacks just last month, at an average of eight incidents per day.



















