DEIR DIBWAN, Dec 25 — The Jewish settler outpost of Or Meir is small. A handful of prefabricated white shelters sit at the end of a short dirt track on a hill leading up from Road 60, a major route that dissects the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
Over time, similar modest dwellings have turned into sprawling Israeli housing developments, part of a plan that members of Israel's Cabinet acknowledge they have implemented to prevent the birth of a Palestinian state.
The process can be violent. A Bedouin family told Reuters that attackers who descended from Or Meir, hurling Molotov cocktails, drove them off Palestinian-owned land nearby last year. They fear they will never be able to return.
Messages posted in Or Meir's Telegram channel celebrate the expulsion of Bedouin herders and show the new settlers’ determination to secure lasting control over what they call “strategic” territory.
This year was one of the most violent on record for Israeli civilian attacks against Palestinians in the West Bank, according to United Nations data that shows more than 750 injuries and the rapid spread of outposts throughout the land Palestinians hope will form the heart of a future state.
Israeli NGO Peace Now has recorded 80 outposts built in 2025, the most since the organisation began recording in 1991. On December 21, Israel's Cabinet approved 19 more settlements, including former outposts. Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said the goal was to block Palestinian statehood.
For decades, groups of settlers have built outposts on West Bank land without official authorisation from the Israeli state. Israeli authorities in the West Bank sometimes demolish such camps, but they often reappear, and in many cases end up being accepted by Israel as formal settlements. Smotrich has pushed efforts to formalise more outposts.
Most of the world considers all of Israel's settlement activity in the West Bank illegal under international law relating to military occupations. Israel disputes this view.
"Since establishing our presence on the land, we have driven away nine illegal Bedouin outposts, and returned 6,000 dunams to Jewish hands," the account representing Or Meir's settlers said in a post in September, using the dunam measurement equal to about 1,000 square meters, or a quarter of an acre.
Reuters could not independently confirm all the attacks on the Bedouins or determine who posted on behalf of Or Meir, which was established about two years ago. The settlers there declined to speak to the news agency.
In response to Reuters' questions about intensifying settler violence in the West Bank, an Israeli official blamed a "fringe minority" and said the media underreported Palestinian attacks against Israelis. The Palestinian Authority did not respond to requests for comment.
Messages on the Or Meir Telegram channel, which is public, suggest a well-organised plan to take land, a finding supported by Reuters’ examination of a dozen other Telegram and WhatsApp groups representing similar groups, three interviews with settlers and pro-settler groups and on-the-ground reporting around Or Meir and a new settlement.
"The evidence shows that this is a systematic pattern of violence,” said Human Rights Watch researcher Milena Ansari, who is based in Jerusalem and whose work includes research on settlements in the West Bank.
The Bedouin Musabah family said they were attacked at night in June from the direction of Or Meir. Charred remains of their home and a barn were still visible to a Reuters team in December.
"We were living here, sitting in God's safety. They started to set fire, and they destroyed everything.
"They did not leave us anything at all," said Bedouin shepherd Shahada Musabah, 39, now sheltering in the nearby Palestinian village of Deir Dibwan.
In response to questions about the incident, Israel's military told Reuters that dozens of Israeli civilians set fire to property in Deir Dibwan on the night in question. It said all suspects had left by the time security forces arrived.
An official in the Deir Dibwan council told Reuters that up to 60 settlers were involved, throwing stones and burning the Musabah house and other property, along with cars. Stones injured several villagers.
In a telephone call, Or Meir settler Elkanah Nachmani told Reuters reporters not to advance up the track to the outpost from Road 60 and not to make contact again.
Nachmani responded to a request for comment but did not address the issues raised by the questions. In the Telegram channel, Or Meir settlers accused Palestinians of poisoning their sheep in November 2024, an accusation the Musabah family denies.
Israeli monitoring group Yesh Din said that of the hundreds of cases of settler violence it documented since October 7, 2023, only two resulted in indictments.
Reuters could not confirm the group's findings. Israel's police and military did not respond to requests for comment.
More than a thousand Palestinians were killed in the West Bank between October 7, 2023 and October 17, 2025, mostly in operations by security forces and some by settler violence, according to the United Nations (UN). In the same period, 57 Israelis were killed in Palestinian attacks.

Turning outposts into settlements
The Or Meir group has been open about its goals.
In November 2024, the Or Meir account posted that it aimed to settle "a strategic ridge near the settlement of Ofra," seeking to create "a continuous Jewish settlement presence."
Israeli peace activist Dror Etkes said other outposts served the same purpose, fracturing the West Bank and "limiting the possibility of Palestinians to be in these places."
Despite the government's actions to recognise dozens of previously irregular outposts, Israel’s military told Reuters in a statement that " Or Meir "is illegal and has been evacuated several times by the security forces."
It did not provide specifics about why it considered the outpost illegal or why it was "evacuated" — the military's word to describe closure or demolition of outposts in the West Bank.
After the most recent evacuation in March, Or Meir re-emerged with the help of over 100,000 Israeli shekels (RM126,961) raised by donations, according to the settlement's website. Reuters could not independently confirm the donations.
The former outposts Israel has formalised as settlements over the years include ones previously evacuated by the army. Ofra, also on Road 60 just north of Or Meir, started as an outpost and is now a significant housing development.
"Why do we continue?" asked a post by the Or Meir Telegram account in March after the evacuation. The post then answered its own question.
"All breakthroughs in settlements were accomplished this way. At first, the state refused to accommodate any activity on the ground and fought it fiercely, but due to the persistence of the citizens, it eventually had to accept it."
In December, Smotrich said 51,370 housing units had been approved for West Bank settlements since he became minister in late 2022, part of what the UN describes as the fastest expansion of settlements since its monitoring began in 2017. Smotrich's office did not respond to a request for comment.
On September 30, the Oir Meir Telegram account posted a map showing the outpost's location. The map highlighted a large area with a blue boundary stretching to the edge of Deir Dibwan. The group said the marked area was under their outpost's control.
At least four attacks on Palestinians have been reported within the blue boundary, according to the Deir Dibwan council, which said Palestinians could no longer access the area, including about 250 dunams belonging to the council itself.
The map also shows eight black markers, mainly within the blue boundary, listed as “abandoned Arab invasion outpost,” indicating places from which Bedouins had allegedly been ejected.

Road 505 to Jordan Valley
Settlements flank road 60. It is intersected by Road 505, which runs west-east toward the Jordan Valley, and is lined with settlements, including Evyatar near the Palestinian town of Beita.
Evyatar began as a tented outpost in 2019. It was evacuated in 2021 but secured Israeli government recognition in 2024. Its mayor Malkiel Barhai credited Smotrich for the approval.
Speaking in Evyatar with a pistol tucked into his trousers that he said was for protection, Barhai said the settlement was vital to keep Road 505 open “because we have Arab villages, hostile Arab villages, around.”
A member of the Beita municipality told Reuters that settlers from surrounding outposts or settlements, including Evyatar, killed 14 people in the area around Beita between 2021 and 2024. Reuters could not verify the deaths or the responsible party.
On November 8, Reuters witnessed an attack by settlers wielding sticks and clubs and hurling large rocks as Palestinians harvested olives close to Beita. Two Reuters employees — a journalist and a security adviser — were among those injured.
Barhai denied that settlers were behind the attacks and blamed Palestinians for the violence.
Farmer Samer Younes Ali Bani Shamsah, who lives near Evyatar and whose leg was broken in a settler attack, said he would not leave the land no matter the cost.
"This is my place, my home. Where would I go?" he said. A hill over, another outpost stood, above a hill of olive trees.



