🏴☠️ | ISRAEL IS EXPANDING UNDER THE COVER OF A CEASEFIRE (1/2):
Under the cover of a ceasefire, the map of the Israeli entity continues to expand, a reality that receives little sustained attention.
Since October, Israel has expanded its de facto military control across multiple fronts simultaneously. In Gaza alone, satellite imagery and field reports indicate that over 1,200 residential structures and public facilities have been demolished despite the declared ceasefire. These demolitions are concentrated behind the so-called “yellow line,” particularly in Al-Shuja’iya and Al-Tuffah in Gaza City, Rafah, and the agricultural belt east of Deir al-Balah, where thousands of dunams of farmland have been rendered unusable.
In the West Bank, Israeli forces and settlers have seized hundreds of square kilometers through military orders and settlement expansion. Since late 2023, at least two compact settlement blocs have been launched, one of them positioned dangerously close to the sanctuary of Al-Aqsa Mosque, accelerating the geographic fragmentation of East Jerusalem. Checkpoints in the West Bank now exceed 750 fixed and flying barriers, severely restricting Palestinian movement.
In occupied Syria, Israeli forces have advanced deep into southern Quneitra, reaching the Al-Alam roundabout, Al-Hamidiyah, and surrounding rural areas. Estimates indicate that Israel now controls or militarily dominates more than 400 square kilometers beyond the original 1974 disengagement lines. Dozens of villages have been partially or entirely depopulated due to displacement. Weapons confiscation campaigns have resulted in near-total civilian disarmament, followed by home raids and arrests. Families report that hundreds of men have been detained, some held for weeks or months without formal charges.
Municipal life is now tightly regulated. Any request for electricity, water, or road repairs must be submitted 24 hours in advance to Israeli authorities. Residents must obtain permits for weddings or gatherings involving more than 20–30 people, while drones routinely monitor agricultural activity during planting and harvesting seasons.
The sudden rebranding and emergence of ISIS 2.0 serves as a strategic pretext for this occupation. Intelligence assessments point to 12,000–14,000 armed ISIS terrorists, many originating from Al-Hol camp, where more than 50,000 detainees and family members remain under loose supervision. Iranian intelligence disclosures months ago confirmed efforts to reactivate these networks in order to destabilize Syria, fracture its territory, and justify prolonged foreign military presence. Overlaps in leadership, rank, and manpower between HTS and ISIS are well documented, with thousands of fighters rotating between formations over time.
Israeli aid distribution in occupied Syrian areas, involving limited food boxes and supplies, is accompanied by population surveys and door-to-door data collection, reinforcing long-term control rather than humanitarian relief. Netanyahu’s public statements further confirm that Israel does not intend to withdraw from these areas, signaling a shift from temporary occupation to permanent entrenchment.
In Lebanon, several areas remain under regular Israeli targeting, reflecting a sustained pattern of military pressure across the southern border region. Israeli warplanes have dropped explosive and sonic bombs on civilian and agricultural areas, including the Salam area on the outskirts of Aaytron, the road to Labouneh, Batishia between Alma al-Shaab and Dhairah, Kfarkela, Blida, and Adaisseh, often forcing farmers and municipal workers, including teams coordinated with UNIFIL, to halt their activities. Artillery shelling has targeted the outskirts of Dhairah village, while sweeping gunfire has been reported from Israeli positions such as Jal al-Deyr toward Aaytron and from the Biyad Blida site toward Blida.
🔹@enemywatch
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Under the cover of a ceasefire, the map of the Israeli entity continues to expand, a reality that receives little sustained attention.
Since October, Israel has expanded its de facto military control across multiple fronts simultaneously. In Gaza alone, satellite imagery and field reports indicate that over 1,200 residential structures and public facilities have been demolished despite the declared ceasefire. These demolitions are concentrated behind the so-called “yellow line,” particularly in Al-Shuja’iya and Al-Tuffah in Gaza City, Rafah, and the agricultural belt east of Deir al-Balah, where thousands of dunams of farmland have been rendered unusable.
In the West Bank, Israeli forces and settlers have seized hundreds of square kilometers through military orders and settlement expansion. Since late 2023, at least two compact settlement blocs have been launched, one of them positioned dangerously close to the sanctuary of Al-Aqsa Mosque, accelerating the geographic fragmentation of East Jerusalem. Checkpoints in the West Bank now exceed 750 fixed and flying barriers, severely restricting Palestinian movement.
In occupied Syria, Israeli forces have advanced deep into southern Quneitra, reaching the Al-Alam roundabout, Al-Hamidiyah, and surrounding rural areas. Estimates indicate that Israel now controls or militarily dominates more than 400 square kilometers beyond the original 1974 disengagement lines. Dozens of villages have been partially or entirely depopulated due to displacement. Weapons confiscation campaigns have resulted in near-total civilian disarmament, followed by home raids and arrests. Families report that hundreds of men have been detained, some held for weeks or months without formal charges.
Municipal life is now tightly regulated. Any request for electricity, water, or road repairs must be submitted 24 hours in advance to Israeli authorities. Residents must obtain permits for weddings or gatherings involving more than 20–30 people, while drones routinely monitor agricultural activity during planting and harvesting seasons.
The sudden rebranding and emergence of ISIS 2.0 serves as a strategic pretext for this occupation. Intelligence assessments point to 12,000–14,000 armed ISIS terrorists, many originating from Al-Hol camp, where more than 50,000 detainees and family members remain under loose supervision. Iranian intelligence disclosures months ago confirmed efforts to reactivate these networks in order to destabilize Syria, fracture its territory, and justify prolonged foreign military presence. Overlaps in leadership, rank, and manpower between HTS and ISIS are well documented, with thousands of fighters rotating between formations over time.
Israeli aid distribution in occupied Syrian areas, involving limited food boxes and supplies, is accompanied by population surveys and door-to-door data collection, reinforcing long-term control rather than humanitarian relief. Netanyahu’s public statements further confirm that Israel does not intend to withdraw from these areas, signaling a shift from temporary occupation to permanent entrenchment.
In Lebanon, several areas remain under regular Israeli targeting, reflecting a sustained pattern of military pressure across the southern border region. Israeli warplanes have dropped explosive and sonic bombs on civilian and agricultural areas, including the Salam area on the outskirts of Aaytron, the road to Labouneh, Batishia between Alma al-Shaab and Dhairah, Kfarkela, Blida, and Adaisseh, often forcing farmers and municipal workers, including teams coordinated with UNIFIL, to halt their activities. Artillery shelling has targeted the outskirts of Dhairah village, while sweeping gunfire has been reported from Israeli positions such as Jal al-Deyr toward Aaytron and from the Biyad Blida site toward Blida.
🔹@enemywatch
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Enemy Watch — Official
🏴☠️ | ISRAEL IS EXPANDING UNDER THE COVER OF A CEASEFIRE (1/2): Under the cover of a ceasefire, the map of the Israeli entity continues to expand, a reality that receives little sustained attention. Since October, Israel has expanded its de facto military…
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(2/2)
Israeli naval activity has also been observed conducting aggressive maneuvers near Lebanese territorial waters. In parallel, Israeli forces have established and maintained positions inside Lebanese territory along the Markaba–Houla road and in the Al-Aabad area, from where machine-gun fire has been directed toward the outskirts of Houla and Markaba. These actions form part of a broader and sustained pattern of territorial violation, military intimidation, and pressure on civilian life in southern Lebanon.
As of now, Israel continues to occupy five strategic sites inside Lebanese territory. Jal al-Deir, located south of Aitaroun in the Bint Jbeil district, directly faces the Israeli towns of Avivim and Malikiya. Jabal Blat, near Ramieh in the Bint Jbeil district, overlooks the southern Lebanese coastline from Tyre to Naqoura and faces the Israeli towns of Shtoula and Zar’it. The Labbouneh–Alma al-Shaab position in the Tyre district commands both land and maritime approaches, overlooks UNIFIL headquarters in Naqoura, and lies opposite the Israeli town of Labbouneh. Israel also occupies a recently constructed military position along the Markaba–Houla road in the Marjayoun district, facing the Israeli town of Margaliot. Hamames Hill, near Khiam in the Marjayoun district, overlooks Khiam and large parts of the Hasbaya region up to Ibl al-Saqi and also faces Margaliot.
Despite these clear and ongoing violations, there is no effective enforcement of international law, no binding convention, and no serious deterrent measures imposed to halt or reverse the occupation. Instead, pressure is placed on states and resistance movements to relinquish their weapons under the promise of stability. Yet the central question remains unanswered. In the absence of legal enforcement, security guarantees, or credible international protection, who guarantees that occupation will end, or that civilians will be protected, once resistance is disarmed?
🔹@enemywatch
(2/2)
Israeli naval activity has also been observed conducting aggressive maneuvers near Lebanese territorial waters. In parallel, Israeli forces have established and maintained positions inside Lebanese territory along the Markaba–Houla road and in the Al-Aabad area, from where machine-gun fire has been directed toward the outskirts of Houla and Markaba. These actions form part of a broader and sustained pattern of territorial violation, military intimidation, and pressure on civilian life in southern Lebanon.
As of now, Israel continues to occupy five strategic sites inside Lebanese territory. Jal al-Deir, located south of Aitaroun in the Bint Jbeil district, directly faces the Israeli towns of Avivim and Malikiya. Jabal Blat, near Ramieh in the Bint Jbeil district, overlooks the southern Lebanese coastline from Tyre to Naqoura and faces the Israeli towns of Shtoula and Zar’it. The Labbouneh–Alma al-Shaab position in the Tyre district commands both land and maritime approaches, overlooks UNIFIL headquarters in Naqoura, and lies opposite the Israeli town of Labbouneh. Israel also occupies a recently constructed military position along the Markaba–Houla road in the Marjayoun district, facing the Israeli town of Margaliot. Hamames Hill, near Khiam in the Marjayoun district, overlooks Khiam and large parts of the Hasbaya region up to Ibl al-Saqi and also faces Margaliot.
Despite these clear and ongoing violations, there is no effective enforcement of international law, no binding convention, and no serious deterrent measures imposed to halt or reverse the occupation. Instead, pressure is placed on states and resistance movements to relinquish their weapons under the promise of stability. Yet the central question remains unanswered. In the absence of legal enforcement, security guarantees, or credible international protection, who guarantees that occupation will end, or that civilians will be protected, once resistance is disarmed?
🔹@enemywatch
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🔔 | REGIONAL UPDATES
Occupied Palestine – Gaza
• Israeli occupation machinery opened intense fire in Bani Suhaila, east of Khan Yunis, within areas of Israeli deployment.
• A large number of refugee tents were flooded across the Gaza Strip due to heavy rains accompanying a low-pressure system.
• In Al-Rimal (Unknown Soldier area), west of Gaza City, displacement tents were inundated by rainfall.
• Gaza Municipality reported the destruction of 72 water wells, 150,000 meters of water networks, and 4 large water tanks, worsening an acute water and public health crisis.
• Amid the blockade on cement and obstruction of relief efforts, cancer patient Ahmad Al-Mabhuh from Al-Bureij refugee camp was forced to build a mud house using primitive means to survive.
Occupied Palestine – West Bank
• Palestinian youths threw a homemade explosive at a settler vehicle near Al-Manshara, on the outskirts of Burqa village, northwest of Nablus.
• Occupation forces forced shop owners to close their stores in the Dawar Interior area of Jenin.
• The occupation army issued a warning to residents of Ras Tirah, south of Qalqilya, demanding they lower the call to prayer, threatening arrests.
• AFP reported that on 18 December, the Israeli army plans to demolish 25 residential buildings housing at least 100 families in Nur Shams refugee camp, Tulkarm.
Lebanon
• An Israeli hostile aircraft dropped a sonic bomb off the coast of Ras al-Naqoura.
• The Lebanese Army announced the arrest of 38 Syrians in camps across Western Bekaa and Baalbek.
Occupied Syria – As-Suwayda
• Violent clashes intensified between Druze groups and al-Golani’s armed factions in the western countryside of As-Suwayda.
• Heavy weapons fire was reported from Tal Hadid toward Druze positions, with Rassas village also targeted.
• Armed factions stationed on the Kanaker axis shelled Rassas, south of As-Suwayda, using heavy weaponry.
• Drones affiliated with armed factions were observed operating over Druze areas.
Armenia
• Advisor to the Leader of the Islamic Revolution, Ali Akbar Velayati, rejected the so-called “Trump plan” for the Caucasus, stating it is effectively the Zangezur Corridor and warning it would open access for NATO and the US to Iran’s northern borders.
🔹 @enemywatch
Occupied Palestine – Gaza
• Israeli occupation machinery opened intense fire in Bani Suhaila, east of Khan Yunis, within areas of Israeli deployment.
• A large number of refugee tents were flooded across the Gaza Strip due to heavy rains accompanying a low-pressure system.
• In Al-Rimal (Unknown Soldier area), west of Gaza City, displacement tents were inundated by rainfall.
• Gaza Municipality reported the destruction of 72 water wells, 150,000 meters of water networks, and 4 large water tanks, worsening an acute water and public health crisis.
• Amid the blockade on cement and obstruction of relief efforts, cancer patient Ahmad Al-Mabhuh from Al-Bureij refugee camp was forced to build a mud house using primitive means to survive.
Occupied Palestine – West Bank
• Palestinian youths threw a homemade explosive at a settler vehicle near Al-Manshara, on the outskirts of Burqa village, northwest of Nablus.
• Occupation forces forced shop owners to close their stores in the Dawar Interior area of Jenin.
• The occupation army issued a warning to residents of Ras Tirah, south of Qalqilya, demanding they lower the call to prayer, threatening arrests.
• AFP reported that on 18 December, the Israeli army plans to demolish 25 residential buildings housing at least 100 families in Nur Shams refugee camp, Tulkarm.
Lebanon
• An Israeli hostile aircraft dropped a sonic bomb off the coast of Ras al-Naqoura.
• The Lebanese Army announced the arrest of 38 Syrians in camps across Western Bekaa and Baalbek.
Occupied Syria – As-Suwayda
• Violent clashes intensified between Druze groups and al-Golani’s armed factions in the western countryside of As-Suwayda.
• Heavy weapons fire was reported from Tal Hadid toward Druze positions, with Rassas village also targeted.
• Armed factions stationed on the Kanaker axis shelled Rassas, south of As-Suwayda, using heavy weaponry.
• Drones affiliated with armed factions were observed operating over Druze areas.
Armenia
• Advisor to the Leader of the Islamic Revolution, Ali Akbar Velayati, rejected the so-called “Trump plan” for the Caucasus, stating it is effectively the Zangezur Corridor and warning it would open access for NATO and the US to Iran’s northern borders.
🔹 @enemywatch
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🇵🇸 | With no access to heating fuel or winter supplies, children in Gaza face severe cold as displaced families struggle to survive in inadequate shelters amid an ongoing humanitarian crisis, Israeli blockade and shortages of basic necessities.
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🇵🇸 | A Palestinian man, diagnosed with cancer and living in the Al-Buraij refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip, built a home with primitive means using mud to shelter his family amid a shortage of reconstruction materials and the stifling Israeli blockade on the enclave.
🔹@enemywatch
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🥀 | Mohammad Salim succumbed to his wounds today in Lebanon, while the fate of the missing has become clear with the return of Martyr Ali Ghassan Hijazi (Abu Ali Tiredba) and the confirmation of Martyr Saeed Hussein Mustafa Al-Ashhab. Funeral arrangements will be announced later, and burial will take place at the Garden of Jannat al-Zahra (S) in Al-Kafaat, South Suburbs of Beirut.
🔹@enemywatch
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🇮🇷:🇦🇪 | Iran Rejects UAE Claims Over Disputed Persian Gulf Islands
Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson, Esmail Baghaei, has firmly rejected what he described as the “baseless claims” made by the UAE over the three disputed islands of Greater Tunb, Lesser Tunb, and Abu Musa. The islands are administered by Iran, despite longstanding claims by the UAE, and are located at a highly strategic point in the Persian Gulf, effectively influencing control over the Strait of Hormuz. Iran maintains airbases on Greater Tunb and Abu Musa, while Lesser Tunb hosts a major ballistic missile base. The United States, the United Kingdom, and the European Union have expressed support for the UAE’s position, while Russia and China have called for talks and a “peaceful resolution” based on UAE-led initiatives. Tehran has reacted critically to Moscow and Beijing’s stance, responding in a manner comparable to its position on the Russia–Japan dispute over the Kuril Islands.
🔹@enemywatch
Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson, Esmail Baghaei, has firmly rejected what he described as the “baseless claims” made by the UAE over the three disputed islands of Greater Tunb, Lesser Tunb, and Abu Musa. The islands are administered by Iran, despite longstanding claims by the UAE, and are located at a highly strategic point in the Persian Gulf, effectively influencing control over the Strait of Hormuz. Iran maintains airbases on Greater Tunb and Abu Musa, while Lesser Tunb hosts a major ballistic missile base. The United States, the United Kingdom, and the European Union have expressed support for the UAE’s position, while Russia and China have called for talks and a “peaceful resolution” based on UAE-led initiatives. Tehran has reacted critically to Moscow and Beijing’s stance, responding in a manner comparable to its position on the Russia–Japan dispute over the Kuril Islands.
🔹@enemywatch
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🇮🇷 | Iran Plans to Produce 20,000 Megawatts of Nuclear Power
The spokesperson for the Iranian Atomic Energy Organization, Behrouz Kamalvandi, confirmed the need to take measures regarding facilities that were targeted during what he described as Zionist and American aggression, noting that there are currently no inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency in Tehran. Speaking on Monday, December 15, 2025, Kamalvandi highlighted Iranian–Russian nuclear cooperation, stating that Iran currently has one operational nuclear power plant and two under construction. He added that during the recent visit of the head of the Atomic Energy Organization, Mohammad Eslami, to Russia, contracts were signed for large-scale power plants. According to Kamalvandi, four nuclear power plants, each with a capacity of 1,200 megawatts, will be inaugurated in the Sirik region, forming part of a long-term cooperation plan with Russia aimed at reaching a total nuclear power capacity of 20,000 megawatts.
🔹@enemywatch
The spokesperson for the Iranian Atomic Energy Organization, Behrouz Kamalvandi, confirmed the need to take measures regarding facilities that were targeted during what he described as Zionist and American aggression, noting that there are currently no inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency in Tehran. Speaking on Monday, December 15, 2025, Kamalvandi highlighted Iranian–Russian nuclear cooperation, stating that Iran currently has one operational nuclear power plant and two under construction. He added that during the recent visit of the head of the Atomic Energy Organization, Mohammad Eslami, to Russia, contracts were signed for large-scale power plants. According to Kamalvandi, four nuclear power plants, each with a capacity of 1,200 megawatts, will be inaugurated in the Sirik region, forming part of a long-term cooperation plan with Russia aimed at reaching a total nuclear power capacity of 20,000 megawatts.
🔹@enemywatch
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🏴☠️ | Israeli tech deals surge, led by Alphabet’s $32 billion Wiz acquisition
Interest in Israeli tech innovation has stayed strong this year, highlighted by a wave of acquisitions and IPOs, including Alphabet's $32 billion acquisition of Israeli cybersecurity firm Wiz, PwC Israel reported today.
According to the consultancy’s report, such deals rose 340% to nearly $59 billion, up from $13.4 billion in 2024. Excluding the Wiz transaction, deal value still doubled to $32 billion.
There were seven IPOs totaling $14.6 billion, compared with six listings worth $781 million in 2024.
🔹@enemywatch
Interest in Israeli tech innovation has stayed strong this year, highlighted by a wave of acquisitions and IPOs, including Alphabet's $32 billion acquisition of Israeli cybersecurity firm Wiz, PwC Israel reported today.
According to the consultancy’s report, such deals rose 340% to nearly $59 billion, up from $13.4 billion in 2024. Excluding the Wiz transaction, deal value still doubled to $32 billion.
There were seven IPOs totaling $14.6 billion, compared with six listings worth $781 million in 2024.
🔹@enemywatch
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🏴☠️ | According to the Hebrew outlet Walla, Washington is preparing a plan to rebuild the city of Rafah in southern Gaza under the name “New Rafah.” However, there is no intention to transfer construction materials to the rest of the Gaza Strip, out of concern that such materials could be used to manufacture explosives or weapons. The report adds that no broad entry of building materials into Gaza is planned, with the stated aim of limiting Hamas’ ability to dig tunnels and reinforce its military capabilities. Israel is also opposing the reopening of the Rafah crossing in both directions, arguing that this would enable Hamas to rebuild its infrastructure, strengthen its manpower, and acquire equipment and weapons. Sources within the Israeli security establishment reportedly warn that Israel is taking a calculated risk by proceeding with the reconstruction of “New Rafah,” given what they describe as the failure to dismantle or disarm Hamas. The report further claims that Hamas has managed to turn the entry of approximately 600 aid trucks into profits amounting to tens of millions of shekels in recent months.
🔹@enemywatch
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🔔 | REGIONAL UPDATES
Occupied Palestine – Gaza
• Israeli occupation machinery opened intense fire in Bani Suhaila, east of Khan Yunis, within areas of Israeli deployment.
• A large number of refugee tents were flooded across the Gaza Strip due to heavy rains accompanying a low-pressure system.
• In Al-Rimal (Unknown Soldier area), west of Gaza City, displacement tents were inundated by rainfall.
• Gaza Municipality reported the destruction of 72 water wells, 150,000 meters of water networks, and 4 large water tanks, worsening an acute water and public health crisis.
• Amid the blockade on cement and obstruction of relief efforts, cancer patient Ahmad Al-Mabhuh from Al-Bureij refugee camp was forced to build a mud house using primitive means to survive.
Occupied Palestine – West Bank
• Palestinian youths threw a homemade explosive at a settler vehicle near Al-Manshara, on the outskirts of Burqa village, northwest of Nablus.
• Occupation forces forced shop owners to close their stores in the Dawar Interior area of Jenin.
• The occupation army issued a warning to residents of Ras Tirah, south of Qalqilya, demanding they lower the call to prayer, threatening arrests.
• AFP reported that on 18 December, the Israeli army plans to demolish 25 residential buildings housing at least 100 families in Nur Shams refugee camp, Tulkarm.
Lebanon
• An Israeli hostile aircraft dropped a sonic bomb off the coast of Ras al-Naqoura.
• The Lebanese Army announced the arrest of 38 Syrians in camps across Western Bekaa and Baalbek.
Occupied Syria – As-Suwayda
• Violent clashes intensified between Druze groups and al-Golani’s armed factions in the western countryside of As-Suwayda.
• Heavy weapons fire was reported from Tal Hadid toward Druze positions, with Rassas village also targeted.
• Armed factions stationed on the Kanaker axis shelled Rassas, south of As-Suwayda, using heavy weaponry.
• Drones affiliated with armed factions were observed operating over Druze areas.
Armenia
• Advisor to the Leader of the Islamic Revolution, Ali Akbar Velayati, rejected the so-called “Trump plan” for the Caucasus, stating it is effectively the Zangezur Corridor and warning it would open access for NATO and the US to Iran’s northern borders.
• UAE-based Dana Gas announced $2.1 million in aid for flood-affected residents in Chamchamal district, Slemani province, in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region.
🔹 @enemywatch
Occupied Palestine – Gaza
• Israeli occupation machinery opened intense fire in Bani Suhaila, east of Khan Yunis, within areas of Israeli deployment.
• A large number of refugee tents were flooded across the Gaza Strip due to heavy rains accompanying a low-pressure system.
• In Al-Rimal (Unknown Soldier area), west of Gaza City, displacement tents were inundated by rainfall.
• Gaza Municipality reported the destruction of 72 water wells, 150,000 meters of water networks, and 4 large water tanks, worsening an acute water and public health crisis.
• Amid the blockade on cement and obstruction of relief efforts, cancer patient Ahmad Al-Mabhuh from Al-Bureij refugee camp was forced to build a mud house using primitive means to survive.
Occupied Palestine – West Bank
• Palestinian youths threw a homemade explosive at a settler vehicle near Al-Manshara, on the outskirts of Burqa village, northwest of Nablus.
• Occupation forces forced shop owners to close their stores in the Dawar Interior area of Jenin.
• The occupation army issued a warning to residents of Ras Tirah, south of Qalqilya, demanding they lower the call to prayer, threatening arrests.
• AFP reported that on 18 December, the Israeli army plans to demolish 25 residential buildings housing at least 100 families in Nur Shams refugee camp, Tulkarm.
Lebanon
• An Israeli hostile aircraft dropped a sonic bomb off the coast of Ras al-Naqoura.
• The Lebanese Army announced the arrest of 38 Syrians in camps across Western Bekaa and Baalbek.
Occupied Syria – As-Suwayda
• Violent clashes intensified between Druze groups and al-Golani’s armed factions in the western countryside of As-Suwayda.
• Heavy weapons fire was reported from Tal Hadid toward Druze positions, with Rassas village also targeted.
• Armed factions stationed on the Kanaker axis shelled Rassas, south of As-Suwayda, using heavy weaponry.
• Drones affiliated with armed factions were observed operating over Druze areas.
Armenia
• Advisor to the Leader of the Islamic Revolution, Ali Akbar Velayati, rejected the so-called “Trump plan” for the Caucasus, stating it is effectively the Zangezur Corridor and warning it would open access for NATO and the US to Iran’s northern borders.
• UAE-based Dana Gas announced $2.1 million in aid for flood-affected residents in Chamchamal district, Slemani province, in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region.
🔹 @enemywatch
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🇮🇳 | PUBLIC HUMILIATION OF A MUSLIM WOMAN DOCTOR AND THE NORMALIZATION OF ANTI-HIJAB HATRED IN INDIA
In a recent provocation reflecting growing hostility toward Muslims and an entrenched animosity toward the hijab, the Chief Minister of India’s second most populous state; Bihar, with a population of over 104 million, named Nitish Kumar, who is also a political ally of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s BJP, publicly humiliated a Muslim woman doctor during an official ceremony on Monday. The doctor had attended the event to receive a certificate recognizing her professional contribution in the medical field. During the ceremony, the Chief Minister gestured at her to remove her hijab and, before she could respond, reached out and forcibly pulled down her burqa, exposing her mouth and chin. The act was captured on video and widely circulated.
This incident is not an isolated lapse but part of a broader and deeply troubling pattern. Muslim women in India have increasingly become targets of both online and offline harassment. From fabricated “love jihad” allegations and entrapment cases to the leaking of personal information, sexualized abuse, and public humiliation, violence against Muslim women has become a disturbingly normalized phenomenon. These practices are routinely amplified by digital platforms and emboldened by a climate of impunity.
Such actions must be understood within the wider ideological framework of RSS-led Hindutva politics, where Muslim identity, particularly visible expressions such as the hijab, is framed as a threat to majoritarian nationalism. The public violation of a Muslim woman’s bodily autonomy by a senior constitutional authority underscores the erosion of democratic norms and the instrumentalization of state power to enforce cultural conformity.
🔹@enemywatch
In a recent provocation reflecting growing hostility toward Muslims and an entrenched animosity toward the hijab, the Chief Minister of India’s second most populous state; Bihar, with a population of over 104 million, named Nitish Kumar, who is also a political ally of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s BJP, publicly humiliated a Muslim woman doctor during an official ceremony on Monday. The doctor had attended the event to receive a certificate recognizing her professional contribution in the medical field. During the ceremony, the Chief Minister gestured at her to remove her hijab and, before she could respond, reached out and forcibly pulled down her burqa, exposing her mouth and chin. The act was captured on video and widely circulated.
This incident is not an isolated lapse but part of a broader and deeply troubling pattern. Muslim women in India have increasingly become targets of both online and offline harassment. From fabricated “love jihad” allegations and entrapment cases to the leaking of personal information, sexualized abuse, and public humiliation, violence against Muslim women has become a disturbingly normalized phenomenon. These practices are routinely amplified by digital platforms and emboldened by a climate of impunity.
Such actions must be understood within the wider ideological framework of RSS-led Hindutva politics, where Muslim identity, particularly visible expressions such as the hijab, is framed as a threat to majoritarian nationalism. The public violation of a Muslim woman’s bodily autonomy by a senior constitutional authority underscores the erosion of democratic norms and the instrumentalization of state power to enforce cultural conformity.
🔹@enemywatch
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