International law considers the occupation of territory to be a temporary situation, not a permanent transfer of sovereignty. The occupying power is bound by international humanitarian law, such as the Geneva Conventions, which obligates them to ensure the well-being of the population and prohibits permanent changes to the territory, including annexation. International law also forbids annexation acquired through force, making such acts illegal.
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- Category: De facto annexation
20251108 - De jure annexation/de facto annexation - Israeli Transportation Minister Miri Regev ignores Trump rejection of West Bank annexation
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- Category: Annexation by stealing land
20251106 - Beit Furik, east of Nablus - Colonizing terrorist stole Palestinian land in Al-Sahl and started to plow
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- Category: Annexation - outposts
20251103 - Kafr Qaddum, east of Qalqilya - Colonists reinstalled a settlement tent on the outskirts of the village
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- Category: Annexation by stealing land
20251103 - Al-Mughayir, northeast of Ramallah - Israeli settlers seized a Palestinian-owned plot, unlawfully turning it into their own farm
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- Category: Annexation
20251022 - PDF - Trump's 'peace' plan: There is no difference about who will annex the West Bank
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- Category: De jure annexation
20251009 - PDF - Sovereignty in All but Name: Israel’s Quickening Annexation of the West Bank
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- Category: Annexation: colonies and outposts
20250930 - Animation - Animated map showing each year from 1967 to September 2025
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- Category: De jure annexation
20250903 - PDF - Smotrich says he is drawing up West Bank annexation maps
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- Category: Annexation - outposts
20250829 - Beit Dajan, northern West Bank - Israeli colonists have set up caravans ushering in a new colonial outpost