Doctors Without Borders (MSF)_Palestinian land
Armed conflict

West Bank: While the world looks elsewhere Palestinian land is disappearing

“The military often comes at night, soldiers swarming the neighbourhood, breaking into our homes, destroying our property and arresting people en masse. Our houses are being seized and demolished,” says Sari Ahmad from Al Fakhiet in Masafer Yatta, in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT). “And the settler attacks have grown more brutal and deadly. Most of them are armed nowadays, and they shoot to kill.”

Sari, who suffers from diabetes, received treatment from Doctors Without Borders (MSF) teams until January; however, as violence and movement restrictions have increased, our teams can no longer access dozens of people in need in the area.

In recent weeks, the dramatic escalation in the conflict between the US, Israel and Iran has added another layer of violence and fear across the OPT.

Doctors Without Borders (MSF)_Palestinian land
Palestinian people waiting for the water truck to arrive to Jabalya city, north of Gaza Strip, Palestine.
Nour Alsaqqa/MSF
When the sirens start, we gather in the hallway of our home, away from the windows. In the distance, explosions echo across the hills as interceptors strike projectiles Yasmin Mohammad, MSF community health worker in Hebron

“When the sirens start, we gather in the hallway of our home, away from the windows. In the distance, explosions echo across the hills as interceptors strike projectiles,” says Yasmin Mohammad, MSF community health worker in Hebron. Unlike in Israeli towns and cities, where shelters and warning systems are widespread, most Palestinians in the West Bank have no access to shelters or protected spaces. When debris falls, families have little choice but to stay inside and hope.

While the world turns its attention to the flying missiles, Israeli forces have been intensifying their military operations across the West Bank. Most checkpoints remain closed, which means for most people, normal daily activities are now even more time-consuming, at times impossible, and carry the risk of injury or death from unprovoked Israeli attacks.

 

Doctors Without Borders (MSF)_Palestinian land
Displaced Palestinian family riding a tuk-tuk; coming back to settle in Beit Lahia city, north of the Gaza strip.
Nour Alsaqqa/MSF

“We feel the space in which we can live, move, and build our lives around is shrinking— while the world looks elsewhere,” says Yasmin Mohammad.

Violence by Israeli settlers has increased in several areas across the West Bank. Residents report settlers entering Palestinian villages or farmland while openly carrying weapons, as well as attacking Palestinians in their cars as they move from place to place.

Rafah city, southern Gaza, Palestine
Ambulance parked in Rafah city, southern Gaza, Palestine.
MSF

Violence and fear shape lives in the West Bank

Between 7 October 2023 and 7 March 2026, 1,071 Palestinians, including 233 children, have been killed in the occupied West Bank, and Jerusalem, according to OHCHR. Eleven were killed by settlers this year alone. “It is shocking and deeply disturbing”, says Salam Yousef, an MSF staff member in the West Bank.

“They attack and kill people without consequences – it feels like there is no justice for us, like our lives don’t count,” says Yousef. “Last week, they [Israeli forces] shot a family of six who were driving home. Only two of the sons survived; they are orphans now – their family was killed in front of them; their brothers were seven and five years old.”

MSF, Doctors Without Borders, Genocide in Gaza, Palestine
Inside Gaza. December 2023
MSF

The widespread and multilayered violence has reshaped life for Palestinians – the sense of an existential threat captures a broader reality unfolding across the West Bank. “These developments feel like more than a series of isolated incidents; it is a slow but significant transformation, step by step, Israeli forces and settlers are taking over,” says Salam Yousef. “It is frightening because we have no control, and the world doesn’t seem to care about what happens to us.”

She adds, “If the world continues to look away, the shrinking of Palestinian land will not stop. It will simply continue — checkpoint by checkpoint, road by road, house by house — until a reality that once seemed temporary becomes permanent.”

MSF, Doctors Without Borders, Genocide in Gaza, Palestine
The severely damaged Kamal Adwan hospital in Gaza City. The three main hospitals in the north, Kamal Adwan, Al Awda and Indonesian hospital, were under siege since October 2024 and the ceasefire was the theatre of relentless attacks, which largely destroyed the facilities. February 2025
Nour Alsaqqa/MSF

“Our lives and dreams are on hold”

“The psychological toll of this environment is immense,” says Elsa Salvatore, MSF psychotherapist in Nablus. “It’s not only about physical violence from settler attacks or what happens at checkpoints. In our sessions, people often speak about the humiliation they experience daily and the constant uncertainty. They become hyper-vigilant, unable to sleep, always expecting something bad to happen.

“Most people have stopped making plans. Many suffer from symptoms related to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) - although PTSD is not correctly describe it, because they are not ‘post’ the traumatic experience, they are still in it, continuously experiencing trauma and uncertainty,” she says

Rafah city, southern Gaza, Palestine
Ambulance parked in Rafah city, southern Gaza, Palestine.
MSF

During this time, when violence, insecurity and restrictions on daily life are increasingly widespread across the West Bank, it is vital that people have access to healthcare. But in reality, it is just the opposite: access to medical care is blocked or severely obstructed.

In certain regions, like Masafer Yatta, south of Hebron, NGOs are blocked from providing essential humanitarian support, as large parts of the area are designated as a military zone and movement is heavily restricted by the Israeli forces. Consequently, we have had to reduce the number of our mobile clinics in the area from 17 to just 5 since September 2025; patients are being cut off from even the most basic medical services. “We feel abandoned and forgotten. There is no one coming to us anymore. When we get sick, we have no choice but to walk for miles. Sometimes we just stay and endure the pain,” says a resident from Masafer Yatta.

Doctors Without Borders (MSF)_Gaza Deregistration
A Doctors Without Borders (MSF) vehicle is parked outside Al Rantisi Hospital in Gaza City, amidst the rubble and destruction in the area. The photo, taken from the hospital’s entrance, looks out onto the street
MSF

Greater needs need more access, not less

Israel’s restrictive new rules threaten to drastically reduce this already insufficient aid. As MSF is one of 37 NGOs whose registration was not renewed by the Israeli authorities as of 1 March 2026, our international staff had to leave the OPT. While our Palestinian colleagues continue to provide healthcare, the future of our projects in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip is uncertain. In Nablus, Jenin and Tulkarem, our activities have also been significantly reduced due to both security concerns and new administrative obstacles imposed since 1 March.

“I’m scared and feel hopeless at the thought that MSF’s services could cease to exist,” says one of our mental health patients in Nablus.

Our teams do their best to provide remote psychosocial sessions online, but this does not provide the same support as in-person care. It especially doesn’t work for survivors of sexual violence, families of low socioeconomic level with telecommunication barriers and patients with chronic psychiatric conditions, such as psychosis.

MSF, Doctors Without Borders, Genocide in Gaza, Palestine
Kamal Adwan Hospital. October 2024
MSF

Access to healthcare is a fundamental human need and a cornerstone of community resilience. When healthcare systems become fragmented, preventive care declines, chronic illnesses worsen, and communities grow more vulnerable. Amid the ongoing humanitarian catastrophe in the OPT, MSF will continue to provide healthcare for as long as possible, doing as much as we can.

What is unfolding in the West Bank today is not inevitable, nor is it invisible. International humanitarian law is clear: As the occupying power, Israel has a legal responsibility to ensure the protection of civilians and to facilitate access to essential medical care. The reality is anything but that. Living conditions for Palestinians in the West Bank are dangerous and blatantly inhumane. “We just want to live safely, raise our children without fear and to be treated with dignity,” says Salam Yousef.