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Deep in the south of Israel in an Arab region known as the Negev Desert, members of the Arab Bedouin community who have lived there for generations are fighting to stay in their homes. Around 90,000 of them are doing everything they can to try to stay put ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The village of Wadi al Naam, a collection of dilapidated, low-slung buildings in the Negev desert, sits in the shadow of a power plant. But the illegal status of the Bedouin village ...
Israeli security forces demolish Bedouin homes in the Negev desert which authorities have described as 'illegal' constructions — Oren Ziv Israeli authorities destroyed around 50 homes belonging to Bedouins in the Negev desert on Wednesday, an AFP ...
ABP News on MSN
Deep dive: Why Israel’s Dimona nuclear site is called ‘Little India’ and why it matters
Dimona, a small desert city in southern Israel, which is home to one of the country’s nuclear facilities, has come under renewed global focus following recent Iranian strikes that left over 100 people injured.
The Bedouins of the Negev desert suffered painful losses on Oct. 7, but less attention has been focused on their plight than on some of the other victims of the Hamas-led attack. By Adam Rasgon Reporting from Amman, Jordan Farhan al-Qadi, the hostage ...
In southern Israel’s Negev desert, residents of the Bedouin village of Khirbet Karkur live in tents and metal-clad makeshift homes. Not far from the border with Gaza, they hear the sounds of the war unfolding next door. There are some 300,000 Arab ...
The Times of Israel on MSN
With missiles flying again, most Negev Bedouin still exposed without any shelter
Barred from building safe rooms and lacking public shelters, many are forced to rely on inadequate protection, a problem endemic to Arab communities that the state has failed to deal with for years The post With missiles flying again,
The Negev Desert is the last place most people imagine fine wine being made. Its arid landscapes conjure sun-bleached rock, acacia trees clinging to survival and heat so fierce it seems more likely to bake a clay pot than coax a grape into ripeness.