EU to impose sanctions on Israeli settlers in occupied West Bank
This photograph shows the illegal Israeli settlement of Efrata built on the land of the Palestinian town of Al-Khader in the Bethlehem governorate in the occupied West Bank on March 6, 2024. (AFP Photo)


The foreign ministers of the European Union are on the same page regarding the plans to impose sanctions on violent Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank, several diplomats told the German Press Agency (DPA) on Monday.

The EU sanctions involve a travel ban and asset freeze and are to come into force in the coming days when published in the EU Official Journal, a register of EU laws. EU citizens are also to be forbidden from doing business with the targets.

A previous EU attempt to sanction Israeli settlers failed after opposition from Hungary, a strong supporter of Israel. Sanctions require unanimity from all EU member states.

Tensions in the West Bank have skyrocketed in the wake of Israel's attacks on Gaza following Hamas's Oct. 7 incursion. Palestinians complain about increased violence by Israeli settlers against their villages and olive groves.

Israel occupied the West Bank and East Jerusalem during the Six-Day War in 1967. Today around 600,000 Israeli settlers live there in more than 200 illegal settlements which are a major source of obstacle to peace in the region.

In 2016, the U.N. Security Council classified these settlements as a violation of international law and called on Israel to stop all settlement activity.

The EU sanctions come after the United States imposed punitive measures on two settlements in the West Bank and targeted three settlers.

More sanctions on the Palestinian resistance group Hamas are to come as part of the agreement to sanction Israeli settlers, EU diplomats said.

EU sanctions have already been imposed on Hamas, which operates mainly in the Gaza Strip, and its representatives several times in the past.

EU foreign ministers are in Brussels to discuss the Israel-Hamas war with Israeli conduct in Gaza under scrutiny over its international law violations.

The war in Gaza has become a "graveyard for many of the most important principles of humanitarian law," EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said on Monday.

The European Union's top diplomat described the conflict in the Gaza Strip as "the greatest open-air graveyard" about civilian casualties among the Palestinian population.

Borrell said EU foreign ministers would also debate the bloc's association agreement with Israel but stressed that it was too early in the process to discuss suspending the agreement. He also urged EU countries to take action over Israeli obstacles to humanitarian aid access in Gaza.

Germany, as "friends of Israel," has made clear to the Israeli government that humanitarian aid in Gaza must be allowed to be delivered, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said.

"The millions of people in Gaza, many, many children who have not had enough food for weeks," need to be cared for, Baerbock said.

"The suffering is simply unbearable," Baerbock said, adding that Germany and the EU are working every day to secure a humanitarian cease-fire in Gaza.