In the last two years Israel has erected nearly 1,000 barriers in the occupied West Bank, restricting movement for Palestinians and severely hindering their lives, a local government body said.
While Israel's military has long imposed movement and access constraints after capturing the West Bank in the 1967 Mideast war, the number of new barriers is unprecedented, residents say
According to the Wall and Settlement Resistance Commission, an official Palestinian governmental body, 916 gates, barriers and walls have been installed since the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on Israel.
Israeli military raids throughout the West Bank have also increased, with Palestinians killed or detained.
Israel says it is trying to root out militancy.
Among the new barriers are metal gates stationed at many village and town entrances and between cities, blocking access in and out.
Sometimes the Israeli military is stationed at them.
Palestinians say the gates have erratic opening hours, with some staying shut for days. Some people sleep at friends' or relatives' homes or go around the gates on foot.
During the first two weeks of September, the United Nations said it documented the installation of 18 gates in the West Bank.
It said the gates and other obstacles, such as large earth mounds and concrete blocks, restrict Palestinians' freedom of movement and access to healthcare and education.
The barriers are placed in the middle of roads, preventing cars from going around them.
The new gates, some of which block roads connecting the northern and southern West Bank, force the territory's 3 million Palestinians to take long detours, with a 20-minute journey now taking more than an hour.
Israel's military says the gates are not meant to restrict people but rather to “manage and monitor."
A military official, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with regulations, said its forces operate under a “complex security reality” in the West Bank, where militants embed themselves within the population and “accordingly, there are dynamic checkpoints and ongoing efforts to monitor movement in various areas."
Residents say some gates have been equipped with cameras.
They also say the barriers have detrimental effects on their lives

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