More than 36,000 Palestinians in the West Bank were forcibly displaced over a year by Israeli settlement expansion and associated violence, the UN human rights office said on Tuesday.

The United Nations said in a report covering 12 months to October 31, 2025, that Israel had accelerated the annexation of large parts of the West Bank, including east Jerusalem. The report cites monitoring and information gathering by the UN's regional office, government sources, and NGOs.

Israel's permanent mission in Geneva, where the UN office is based, said it was working on a response to the report.

The mission had dismissed previous reports on Israeli actions and said last month that the UN human rights office had lost its credibility.

The West Bank, home to 2.7 million Palestinians, has long been central to plans for a future Palestinian state existing alongside Israel, but successive Israeli governments have expanded settlements rapidly, fragmenting the land.

A man looks at destroyed vehicles, as Palestinians assess damage at the scene after what they said was an Israeli settler attack, at their village of Um Safa near Ramallah, in the West Bank, March 11, 2025.
A man looks at destroyed vehicles, as Palestinians assess damage at the scene after what they said was an Israeli settler attack, at their village of Um Safa near Ramallah, in the West Bank, March 11, 2025. (credit: REUTERS/Mohammed Torokman)

More than half a million Israelis live in the West Bank, and Israel disputes the view that its settlements are unlawful, citing biblical and historical ties to the land.

Report says there has been a significant uptick in settler violence

The UN report said violence by Israeli settlers against Palestinians in the West Bank has also increased sharply since the beginning of the war in Gaza in October 2023.

Settler attacks rose to 1,732 incidents, from 1,400 in the previous reporting period, the report said.

Settler violence continued in "a coordinated, strategic and largely unchallenged manner," and Israeli authorities often enabled or participated in the attacks, it added.

The report said the scale and pattern of displacement, which coincides with extensive displacement in Gaza, suggested a concerted policy of mass forcible transfer.

This could amount to "ethnic cleansing," it said, echoing concerns in a report issued last month.