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Israeli security forces attend a site that was reportedly set ablaze by Israeli settlers in the Palestinian village of Idna in the occupied West Bank. Photograph: Hazem Bader/AFP/Getty Images View image in fullscreen Israeli security forces attend a site that was reportedly set ablaze by Israeli settlers in the Palestinian village of Idna in the occupied West Bank. Photograph: Hazem Bader/AFP/Getty Images UK readies sanctions against Israel to deter proposed illegal West Bank settlement Move comes as 137 Labour MPs sign letter demanding ‘urgent, concrete action’ to stop settler violence The UK Foreign Office and a group of western countries are due to announce a package of sanctions against Israel this week designed to deter companies from becoming involved in a new proposed West Bank settlement that would split the territory in two and render the concept of a two-state solution near impossible. The package follows a warning by nine countries including France, the UK and Australia that settlement violence must stop and no company should be involved in what is known as the E1 development. Tenders were opened this month for the development of more than 3,000 homes between Jerusalem and the Ma’ale Adumim. The development would split the West Bank between north and south, and so effectively make a contiguous Palestinian West Bank impossible. It comes as 137 Labour MPs – including the former health secretary Wes Streeting who said this week that he felt he was “hitting up against a brick wall” when he tried to raise concerns about Gaza in government – sent a letter to the foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, urging her to take “urgent, concrete action to counter the escalation of violations against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, in particular by ending trade with illegal Israeli settlements”. Melanie Ward, who organised the letter and was the chief executive of Medical Aid for Palestinians before becoming an MP, said: “Banning settlement trade would send the clearest possible message to Israel that settlements can have no viable economic future and are rejected by the world. This is needed now more than ever.” View image in fullscreen Workers sit in the ruins of shops demolished by Israeli forces in the occupied Palestinian West Bank town of al-Eizariya in May. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images Last week, the UN committee on the exercise of the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people condemned an order signed by the Israeli finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, to start displacing the Palestinian Bedouin community of Khan al-Ahmar in the occupied West Bank, saying it would “heighten the risk of forced transfer of the civilian population” and calling such a move illegal and a war crime. The MPs’ letter said Khan al-Ahmar was “in a gruelling struggle against erasure, displacement and state-backed settler violence as part of Israel’s E1 plan” which it said sought to bisect the West Bank and would “make the two-state solution that w
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    Sanctions against Israel are a band-aid for an open wound. A peaceful two-state solution is the only sustainable path forward.
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    Sanctions against Israel? More like a slap on the wrist for their illegal settlements. A two-state solution? Sounds like a plan, but lets hope its as easy as turning off a broken lightbulb.