Post Tribune (Sunday)

West Bank settler clashes continue

Israeli teen’s body discovered, further inflaming tensions

- By Aaron Boxerman The New York Times

JERUSALEM — An Israeli teenager whose disappeara­nce had led to riots by Israeli settlers in the West Bank was found dead Saturday, Israeli authoritie­s said, threatenin­g to further inflame tensions in the Israeli-occupied territory.

Dozens of Israelis and Palestinia­ns were wounded during clashes later Saturday at several locations across the West Bank, the Israeli military said in a statement. Israeli extremists stormed at least two villages in the territory, attempting to burn Palestinia­n property and clashing with residents, according to Palestinia­n witnesses.

Binyamin Achimair, 14, had left a farming settlement in the West Bank to herd sheep Friday morning, but he never returned, Israeli police said. Israeli forces later found his corpse, and the military said he had been “murdered in a terrorist attack” without providing evidence.

After Binyamin’s disappeara­nce, armed Israeli settlers stormed a Palestinia­n village near Ramallah, torching several buildings and cars, according to Palestinia­n officials and Yesh Din, an Israeli rights group. One Palestinia­n man, Jihad Abu Aliya, was killed during the clashes and at least 25 were wounded, the village mayor, Amin Abu Aliya, said.

Binyamin’s death and the possibilit­y of further reprisals could ratchet up violence in the West Bank, where 500,000 Israeli settlers live alongside 2.7

million Palestinia­ns. More than 400 Palestinia­ns have been killed by Israeli forces across the West Bank and east Jerusalem since the Hamas-led attack Oct. 7 sparked Israel’s campaign in the Gaza Strip, according to the United Nations.

The Israeli military announced Saturday that it would bolster its forces in the West Bank with additional companies and police.

The Israeli mob assaults returned Saturday in Al Mughayir and Duma, a nearby Palestinia­n village, according to an Israeli security official and Palestinia­n witnesses. Israeli settlers, some of them armed, entered the villages, the official said, and there were reports that they had

opened fire.

In Duma, the attackers “covered the entire village,” resident Naser Dawabsheh said, and set several buildings and cars ablaze, sending a cloud of dense smoke overhead. Israeli soldiers “didn’t disperse the settlers, they protected them and fired tear gas at anyone who approached,” he said.

The clashes in Al Mughayir left at least three Palestinia­ns wounded, one critically, the Palestinia­n Health Ministry said.

“There’s no order, there’s no safety,” said Na’asan Na’asan, 28, a resident of Al Mughayir. “They’re shooting at us — why isn’t there anyone to protect us?”

A veteran Israeli photojourn­alist, Shaul Golan, 74,

said in an interview that Israeli settlers caught and beat him, then destroyed his equipment because he tried to film them in Al Mughayir. Some of them were masked, while others were wearing Israeli military uniforms.

“I begged the soldiers there to help me, to save me,” Golan said. “But then I realized that they weren’t really soldiers — they were working with them.”

The Biden administra­tion has said Israel must do more to clamp down on violence by extremist Israeli settlers, and it has imposed sanctions on several it said were involved in attacks on Palestinia­ns. Israeli leaders denounced that move as interferen­ce in the country’s internal affairs.

As Israeli troops and police officers searched for Binyamin on Friday afternoon, armed Israeli settlers burst into Al Mughayir, setting buildings and cars on fire, Abu Aliya said. In video circulated by Yesh Din, smoke can be seen billowing from some burning cars and buildings.

In a statement, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu decried Binyamin’s “heinous murder” and vowed that Israel would “close accounts” with whomever killed him. He did not explicitly mention the settler rampages, instead telling the Israeli public to “allow the security forces to conduct their work unmolested” as they investigat­e the killing.

Yair Lapid, the leader of Israel’s parliament­ary opposition, similarly condemned the teenager’s murder. But he also denounced the settler attacks, saying “the violent riots by settlers are a dangerous violation of the law, and they are hampering the forces operating on the ground.”

The Israeli military confirmed that multiple “violent riots” had taken place in the area during the search efforts Friday. At one point, “rocks were hurled” at Israeli soldiers, leading them to open fire in response, the Israeli military said. Israeli police and soldiers had also removed Israeli settlers who had entered Al Mughayir.

Israeli soldiers were in the area “even before the settlers arrived,” Abu Aliya and Na’asan said, but did not block them from entering the village and torching buildings and cars. It was not immediatel­y clear how Jihad Abu Aliya, the village resident, was killed.

Human rights groups have long charged that Israeli authoritie­s do not do enough to prevent violent attacks by Israeli settlers against Palestinia­ns and that the perpetrato­rs are rarely arrested.

An Israeli police spokespers­on did not respond to a request for comment as to whether any Israelis had been arrested during the incident.

Last February, an attack by Israeli settlers devastated the Palestinia­n town of Huwara in the northern West Bank. At least one Palestinia­n was killed and 390 were wounded in the riot, according to Palestinia­n officials, in which Israelis burned a number of buildings and cars while terrified Palestinia­ns fled burning homes.

 ?? JAAFAR ASHTIYEH/GETTY-AFP ?? A Palestinia­n inspects his damaged belongings Saturday in Al Mughayir in the West Bank.
JAAFAR ASHTIYEH/GETTY-AFP A Palestinia­n inspects his damaged belongings Saturday in Al Mughayir in the West Bank.

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