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Martin Kear serves as a lecturer specializing in international relations at the University of Sydney.
Ian Parmeter holds the position of research scholar at the Australian National University’s Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies.
According to the United Nations Human Rights Office in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, 1,001 Palestinians have lost their lives in the West Bank and East Jerusalem since October 7, 2023. The majority of these fatalities have been attributed to Israeli security forces, whom the UN has accused of routinely employing lethal force in most encounters with Palestinians.
In each incident, the military claimed that the youths involved had been throwing stones at their personnel.

Palestinian olive growers in the West Bank have faced challenges as Israeli security forces have reportedly obstructed roads and restricted access during the crucial harvest period. Source: Getty / Anadolu
October is the annual olive harvest season in the West Bank — a key economic, social and cultural event for Palestinians — but attacks against Palestinians by settlers have reportedly spiked.
In 2024, more than 200 attacks were recorded, nearly double those in 2023 and more than three times higher than in 2022.
How many Israeli settlers are in the West Bank?
The West Bank and East Jerusalem are also home to around three million Palestinians.
In July, Israel’s parliament voted in favour of annexing the West Bank to claim it as part of Israel in a symbolic, non-binding motion.
There are more than 140 officially recognised West Bank settlements, illegal under international law, and more than 200 outposts, which are also illegal under Israeli law, but rarely result in legal consequences.

Israeli finance minister Bezalel Smotrich said earlier this year a controversial settlement project in the West Bank would “definitively bury” the idea of a Palestinian state. Source: AAP / Ohad Zwigenberg
Critics of the E1 project, which, like all Israeli settlements in the West Bank, is considered illegal under international law, say it will essentially split the West Bank in two, break Palestinian contiguity and significantly impede the chances for a viable two-state solution.
Kear argues the two-state solution has been a “fallacy” since Israel’s occupation in 1967, as Palestinians would not accept a state without East Jerusalem as its capital, and Israel will “never give up control” of it.

The UN Human Rights Office in the Occupied Palestinian Territory has accused Israeli forces of “systemic use of lethal force against Palestinians” in the West Bank. Source: Getty / Anadolu
Both Kear and Parmeter brought up the continued popularity of Hamas within the West Bank.