Settlers force Palestinians to exhume body of relative buried near West Bank settlement

Family rebury body elsewhere as IDF soldiers stand by; Palestinian man and young son reportedly attacked by settlers wielding sharp instruments in southern West Bank

Palestinians seen being forced by settlers to remove a body they said was buried too close to the settlement of Sa-Nur in the West Bank on May 8, 2026 (X; used in accordance with Clause 27a of the Copyright Law)

Israeli settlers forced Palestinians to exhume the body of a relative from a freshly dug grave and move it to another location, after claiming the deceased was buried too close to an Israeli settlement, all while troops stood by.

The incident took place on Friday near the newly re-established northern West Bank settlement of Sa-Nur.

According to an IDF statement on Saturday, the funeral held by the Palestinians near Sa-Nur had been coordinated in advance with the military.

Despite this, a number of settlers from Sa-Nur arrived at the location shortly after, armed with digging tools, and began digging at the site. The Palestinians then returned to the gravesite, and the settlers demanded that they take the body out of the grave and move it elsewhere, claiming that it was too close to the settlement.

The IDF said that troops were “dispatched to the cemetery following a report of friction between Israeli civilians who were digging in the ground at the site, and Palestinians.”

The army said the troops “confiscated digging tools from the Israelis and remained at the location to prevent further friction.”

Footage posted online showed soldiers standing by as the Palestinians carried the body to another location.

The IDF said that it “condemns any attempt to act in a manner that harms public order, the rule of law, and the dignity of the living and the dead.”

“The issue of coordinating the funeral and the management of the incident will be investigated by the commanders, and lessons will be learned accordingly,” the army added.

The incident is the latest in a string of violent attacks by settlers across the West Bank, largly unimpeded by the military.

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Separately, a Palestinian man and his young son were hospitalized after being attacked by settlers in Khirbet Shuweika, south of Hebron in the southern West Bank on Friday, Palestinian media reported.

Footage published by Palestinian media shows the pair on the side of a road, with the boy bleeding from the back of his head and the father bleeding from a gash on the side of his forehead.

A Palestinian man injured by settlers in the West Bank on May 8, 2026. (Screenshot: X, used in accordance with Clause 27a of the Copyright Law)

Separate footage showed them receiving treatment at a hospital.

WAFA, the Palestinian Authority’s official news agency, reported that the two were attacked by several settlers wielding sharp instruments, who also shattered the windows of the Palestinians’ car.

It follows several violent attacks reportedly carried out by settlers against Palestinians in the West Bank this week,

In one incident, four Palestinians were wounded, including a 71-year-old woman, during a confrontation between settlers and the residents of a village east of Hebron.

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Critics accuse the government of turning a blind eye to the violent attacks by settler extremists, which have become increasingly deadly in recent years. The military recorded 867 incidents of nationalistic crime and settler violence in 2025, compared to 682 incidents in 2024.

The IDF has also faced criticism for often standing by while attacks unfold — with troops sometimes actively participating — or failing to prosecute those responsible, though the attacks take place on a daily basis.

IDF Central Command chief Maj. Gen. Avi Bluth recently warned about the near-daily phenomenon, which he termed “Jewish terrorism.”

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