The UN humanitarian coordinator for the Palestinian territories, James Rawley, criticized on Friday the demolition of 36 homes in the Jordan Valley by the Zionist bulldozers and urged a halt to such actions in the West Bank.
The UN humanitarian coordinator for the Palestinian territories, James Rawley, criticized on Friday the demolition of 36 homes in the Jordan Valley by the Zionist bulldozers and urged a halt to such actions in the West Bank.
Meanwhile, hundreds of activists staged an overnight demonstration in the Jordan Valley region.
The demolitions in the Jordan Valley community of Ain el-Helwe on Thursday displaced 66 people, including 36 children, Rawley said in a statement.
"I am deeply concerned about the ongoing displacement and dispossession of Palestinians... along the Jordan Valley where the number of structures demolished more than doubled in the last year," he said.
"This activity not only deprives Palestinians of access to shelter and basic services, it also runs counter to international law."
His office said more than 1,000 people had been displaced last year in the West Bank and annexed east Jerusalem by demolitions on the grounds that homes had been built without Zionist permits, "which are virtually impossible to obtain".
On Friday, around 300 Palestinians together with Zionist and foreign activists set up camp in abandoned houses near Jericho in the West Bank to protest against the entity's refusal to pull out of the Jordan Valley in case of a peace deal.
The demonstrators in Ain Hijleh village were equipped with generators and said they planned to spend the night in around a dozen of the houses, as Israeli troops and police kept watch from a distance.
They held a banner reading: "No peace with settlements."
Their action -- dubbed "Melh al-Ard" (salt of the earth) -- aimed "to revive an old Palestinian Canaanite village in the Jordan Valley", to counter any Israeli annexation plans, the activists said in a statement.
They condemned Jewish settlement construction in the West Bank and the Zionist-Palestinian peace process brokered by US Secretary of State John Kerry. His efforts would "establish a disfigured Palestinian state and recognizes the Israeli entity as a Jewish state", they said.
Kerry is trying to draw up a framework agreement which would set out the end game in the resumed negotiations and guide the talks going forward over the next few months.