Israel strips Palestinians of control over holy site in Hebron

Published June 17, 2026 Updated June 17, 2026 06:57am
Israeli flags flutter on the Ibrahimi mosque, also known as the Cave of the Patriarchs, in Hebron, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank April 21, 2026. —Reuters
Israeli flags flutter on the Ibrahimi mosque, also known as the Cave of the Patriarchs, in Hebron, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank April 21, 2026. —Reuters

HEBRON: Israel’s Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said on Tuesday he had stripped Palestinians of authority over the site of the Cave of Patriarchs, known to Muslims as the Ibrahimi Mosque, in the occupied West Bank.

The move to transfer management of the site to an Israeli committee controlled by the far-right minister, drew swift condemnation from the Palestinian Authority.

In a statement posted on his Telegram channel, Smotrich said the site will no longer be administered by the municipality authority in the West Bank city of Hebron.

“The meaning of this decision is that many authorities previously granted in Hebron and at the holy sites — including the very foundation of our existence, the Cave of the Patriarchs — are no longer under the control of the Hebron Municipality,” Smotrich said.

Smotrich posted his remarks as he attended an event marking the laying of the foundation stone of a new Israeli settlement near Hebron.

“This is much more than a planning step, it is a step... of practical sovereignty, of governance,” Smotrich said, according to footage of the ceremony released by his party.

Hebron is the largest city in the West Bank, the Palestinian territory occupied by Israel since 1967.

The Cave of the Patriarchs sits inside H2, an Israeli-controlled sector of the city housing roughly 40,000 Palestinians alongside some 200 Israeli settler families.

It is venerated by Jews, Muslims and Christians alike as the burial site of Abraham and other biblical patriarchs.

A 1997 protocol left management of most of the complex in Palestinian hands, an arrangement Palestinian officials say Israel has steadily eroded in recent years.

“What Smotrich did is he controls the Higher Planning Council, which set a meeting on Wednesday where they decided that these responsibilities in Hebron will go from the Palestinian municipality of Hebron to Israel,” Yonatan Mizrahi, co-director of Peace Now, an Israeli settlement watchdog, said. Minutes from the planning meeting confirm this decision.

The Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority, led by president Mahmoud Abbas, rejected the move outright.

“Such unilateral measures are rejected and condemned, and constitute a violation of signed agreements with the Israeli side, as well as a breach of international law,” Abbas’s office said.

In a statement, Hebron’s municipality condemned Smotrich’s announcement, which came on the day marking the Islamic new year.

Published in Dawn, June 17th, 2026

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