Skip to main content
MSF teams visit Khallet Athaba to assess community needs. In Masafer Yatta, mobile clinics provide medical and psychological care to families living under continuous attacks
MSF teams visit Khallet Athaba to assess community needs. In Masafer Yatta, mobile clinics provide medical and psychological care to families living under continuous attacks. West Bank, Palestine, September 2025.
© MSF

Majority of homes in Masafer Yatta community have been reduced to rubble

MSF teams visit Khallet Athaba to assess community needs. In Masafer Yatta, mobile clinics provide medical and psychological care to families living under continuous attacks. West Bank, Palestine, September 2025.
© MSF
Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
Learn more

In the West Bank of Palestine, families are enduring daily harassment and violence from Israeli settlers as part of a broader policy of ethnic cleansing. In communities around the Masafer Yatta area, homes and infrastructure are being demolished, pushing people into more and more precarious living conditions.

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams recently visited the village of Khallet Athaba, where now only the school and three houses are left standing. Frederieke van Dongen, our humanitarian affairs manager in the West Bank, shares what she heard from residents.

In Khallet Athaba’, a village in Masafer Yatta, in the Hebron governorate of the Palestinian West Bank, Palestinian families are enduring daily harassment, intimidation, and violent attacks from Israeli settlers, often under the protection of the Israeli forces. The destruction has left the majority of residents without adequate shelter, water, or electricity.

According to testimonies from the community, since February 2025, Israeli forces conducted four mass demolitions, reducing more than 85 per cent of homes and shelters to rubble, forcing families to move into caves. Last week, Israeli forces returned and demolished seven shelters, nine tents, and six caves, along with over 14 water tanks and the village’s entire electricity system. Families are left with almost no options for safe shelter. Only the school and three houses are left standing.

The community, home to around 100 people, continues to resist displacement despite the scale of destruction. Frederieke van Dongen, MSF humanitarian affairs manager in the West Bank

The community, home to around 100 people, continues to resist displacement despite the scale of destruction. Families who have lost their houses have moved into caves, only to face settlers entering and attacking them inside. One resident described the constant expansion of settlements nearby, with caravans appearing closer to the village each day.

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams who visited Khallet Athaba’ reported that the community urgently needs medical care, mental health support, hygiene items, food, and water and sanitation services. But above all, families stressed their need for protection, dignity, and access to essential services.

MSF delivers general healthcare and mental health and psychosocial support through mobile clinics serving five villages in and around Masafer Yatta.

One resident told our teams that a month ago, nine settlers forced their way into her home, where she was alone with her four children. The settlers began beating the children with metal bars and attempted to strike her three-month-old baby on the head. Both the mother and the baby were then pepper-sprayed, and the settlers continued beating her while she was trying to protect her baby, fracturing a bone in her hand. One of her children, aged 13, suffered a broken arm, while another, aged 3, sustained a head injury and a bone fracture. The baby was later taken to hospital and remains under observation due to continued vomiting.

What is happening in Masafer Yatta is part of a broader policy of ethnic cleansing, aimed at forcibly transferring Palestinians from the area. Despite repeated demolitions and attacks, no one has left the village. Residents insist they will not become refugees in their own land.