A Palestinian official in the occupied West Bank has described Israel's latest expansion of control there as the end of the road for negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians. Asma al-Sharabati, acting mayor of Hebron, said new legal changes recently announced by Israeli cabinet ministers would leave Palestinian authorities shut out of decisions on urban planning and development, even in areas under Palestinian control. Hebron is a regular flashpoint in the West Bank - a divided city where soldiers guard hundreds of Israeli settlers living alongside Palestinians in an Israeli military garrison.

On Sunday, the Israeli security cabinet passed major changes to the established division of powers in the West Bank, set up three decades ago under the US-backed Oslo Accords, signed by both Israeli and Palestinian leaders. These include expanding Israeli control beyond its military occupation, into the provision of municipal services in Palestinian-run areas, as well as broad powers to take over so-called 'heritage sites' across the West Bank – to protect water, environmental, and archaeological resources, they say. Israel is also set to take over planning authority at the Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron, one of the holiest sites in Judaism, which sits inside the city's Ibrahimi Mosque.

Al-Sharabati commented on the implications of these changes, stating, Now they can simply put their hands on any building and declare it is ancient, and the Palestinian authorities are not part of any decision on urban planning or development of the area. She noted that she had not received any formal notification of Israel's plans, acquiring information from Israeli news sources instead. The ongoing situation displays a tense landscape, as locals express fears for their rights and future under increasing Israeli authority.

The new measures have prompted widespread concerns about the erosion of hopes for Palestinian statehood, with various political leaders condemning the decisions. Palestinians now question the viability of their governance as Israel deepens its roots in the West Bank, pushing forward with what many perceive as a de facto annexation of the region.