Israeli settlers set fire to the Abu Bakr al-Siddiq Mosque near Nablus before dawn prayers on the first Monday of Ramadan, spraying ‘Price Tag’ graffiti on its walls — as Israeli occupation forces conducted simultaneous raids, arrests, and a home demolition across the West Bank.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres condemned the killing of 19-year-old Palestinian-American Nasrallah Abu Siam, who was shot and beaten by Israeli settlers in the West Bank village of Mukhmas while trying to prevent them from stealing his community’s sheep. Three others were wounded in the same attack.
Protests erupted in Utrecht, Netherlands after reports emerged of racist police violence targeting two Muslim women. The incident has drawn attention to a broader pattern of Islamophobia and racial profiling affecting Muslim communities across Europe — including discriminatory treatment of hijab-wearing women in schools and public life.
Offensive hate graffiti was discovered on Edinburgh Central Mosque, alarming worshippers and prompting condemnation from local residents and community leaders. Police are treating the incident as a hate crime. United Voices stands with Scotland’s Muslim community and calls for full accountability.
United Voices condemns the deadly attack on a Jewish community in Australia, rejects collective blame, and calls for principled solidarity against all forms of hate.
Two mosques in the German city of Hannover were defaced with graffiti apparently in support of the Israeli military’s campaign in Gaza. The attacks are part of a documented and accelerating wave of Islamophobia across Europe that United Voices has been tracking — from Ireland to the Netherlands to France to Germany.
When the Winooski School District in Vermont raised the Somali flag to show support for its Somali students after President Trump publicly attacked Somali communities in Minnesota, the school was immediately flooded with racist slurs, threats, and calls saying ‘We’re coming for you.’ United Voices is documenting what happens when a school tries to stand with its students.
Across Texas, Florida, and other states, anti-Muslim networks have been monitoring Muslim Student Association social media to track campus events — then showing up uninvited to harass students while they pray, film them without consent, and in one case burn a Quran. United Voices has written to more than 2,000 university leaders demanding immediate action to protect Muslim students.
