KHIRBET HUMSU, West Bank — Israel has come under heavy criticism after the military demolished several homes and other structures in a Bedouin community in the occupied West Bank this week as much of the world's attention was focused on the U.S. election.
On Friday, a group of European diplomats visited the community of Khirbet Humsu in the northern Jordan Valley in a show of support for the Palestinian community against what an EU representative said was a violation of international law.
Israeli troops with bulldozers and heavy equipment on Tuesday — U.S. Election Day — demolished 18 tents and other structures that housed 74 people, including 41 minors, according to the Israeli rights group B'Tselem. The Israeli military said the structures were built without permission.
B'Tselem said the troops also demolished livestock enclosures, storage sheds, cooking tents, solar panels, water containers and feeding troughs, and that they confiscated 30 tons of livestock feed, a vehicle and two tractors.
Abed al Ghani Awad, a resident of the impoverished Bedouin community, said life was already difficult before the demolitions.
"We suffer from all different kinds of weather, heat and cold and water scarcity," he said, adding that the closest source of water is 14 kilometers (9 miles) away.
European Union Representative Sven Kühn von Burgsdorff, who led the delegation, said it was "very clear" that the demolition of the structures "is contrary to international law."
Yvonne Helle, the U.N. humanitarian coordinator for the Palestinian territories, said in a statement earlier this week that it was the single largest demolition of its kind in the past decade.