Gulf Today

Two Palestinia­ns shot dead by Israelis in occupied West Bank

Two Palestinia­ns, one a teenager, were killed in separate incidents in the occupied West Bank, hours ater police apprehende­d two Palestinia­n men suspected of killing three Israelis last week

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Two Palestinia­ns, one a teenager, were killed in separate incidents in the occupied West Bank, hours ater police apprehende­d two Palestinia­n men suspected of killing three Israelis last week.

It was the latest episode of violence during weeks of Palestinia­n atacks in Israel, and Israeli military raids in the occupied West Bank that have let at least 18 Israelis and more than 30 Palestinia­ns dead.

The Palestinia­n man died ater he was shot by Israeli troops trying to cross Israel’s separation barrier near a military checkpoint in the occupied West Bank.

The Israeli military said soldiers “spotted a suspect” attempting to sneak across the barrier near the West Bank city of Tulkarem and fired at him. It said the man was evacuated to receive medical treatment, but declined commenting on the man’s condition.

The Palestinia­n Health Ministry confirmed his death.

The Israeli military also said an Israeli civilian shot a Palestinia­n armed with a knife who entered a West Bank setlement south of Jerusalem.

The Palestinia­n Health Ministry said 17-year-old Mutassim Atallah was killed in the Tekoa setlement. Searches were under way for a second Palestinia­n, the army said.

In a separate incident, police said a Palestinia­n stabbed and wounded a police officer outside Jerusalem’s Old City, and that officers shot the assailant.

Paramedics said the officer was hospitalis­ed in moderate condition. The attacker’s condition was not immediatel­y clear.

Sunday’s incidents were the latest in string of violent episodes in recent weeks, including deadly atacks inside Israel, an Israeli military crackdown in the West Bank, and clashes between Israeli police and Palestinia­ns at a major holy site in Jerusalem sacred to Jews and Muslims.

The ongoing conflict plays out against the backdrop of Israel’s occupation, now in its 55th year, of the West Bank and other lands Palestinia­ns seek for a state.

Serious peace talks collapsed more than a decade ago, while Israel’s setlement expansion on occupied lands has continued unabated.

This week, Israel said it is set to advance plans for the constructi­on of 4,000 settler homes in the West Bank. If approved, it would be the biggest advancemen­t of setlement plans since the Biden administra­tion took office.

Sunday began with Israeli police capturing two Palestinia­ns who killed three people in a stabbing atack last week and fled the scene, sparking a massive manhunt and keeping the country on edge.

The two attackers went on a stabbing rampage in the ultra-orthodox city of Elad on Thursday, Israel’s independen­ce day, killing three and wounding at least four others before bolting.

Prime Minister Natali Bennet told his cabinet on Sunday that forces captured “terrorists awash with incitement who killed with axes and unimaginab­le cruelty.”

He said Israel was entering a “new stage in the war on terror,” and said Israel was establishi­ng a civilian national guard that would be deployed in emergency situations like the kinds of atacks the country has witnessed in recent weeks.

“The Israeli government’s main goal is to restore personal security to Israeli citizens,” he said.

A joint statement by police, the military and the Shin Bet internal security agency said the men, identified as 19 and 20-year-old Palestinia­ns, were caught near a quarry not far from Elad following a search that began Thursday by special forces and commando units using helicopter­s and other means.

Images in Israeli media showed masked security forces confrontin­g the men, who appeared to be beneath a green shrub in a rugged patch of land.

As forces scoured the area looking for the men, police called on the public to avoid the area, and urged Israelis to report suspicious vehicles or people to them.

Police said the attackers were from near the city of Jenin in the West Bank. The city and an adjacent refugee camp have reemerged as a militant bastion in the latest wave of violence — the worst Israel has seen in years.

Several of the attackers in the recent violence have come from Jenin.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? ↑
Palestinia­ns gather with national flags along a beach in Gaza City on Sunday.
Agence France-presse ↑ Palestinia­ns gather with national flags along a beach in Gaza City on Sunday.

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