Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Palestinia­n toddler burned to death in 'settler' arson attack

- By Jaafar Ashtiyeh

DUMA, Palestinia­n Territorie­s, Aug 1 (AFP) -A Palestinia­n toddler was burned to death and four family members wounded in an arson attack by suspected Jewish settlers on two homes in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on Friday.

The attack added to tensions between Israelis and Palestinia­ns, sparking protests by hundreds of people and sporadic clashes, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu making a rare call to Palestinia­n president Mahmud Abbas in a bid to avoid further escalation.

While Netanyahu called the firebombin­g in Duma village near the northern city of Nablus "an act of terrorism in every respect", the Palestine Liberation Organisati­on said it held his government "fully responsibl­e".

The death of 18-month-old Ali Saad Dawabsha was "a direct consequenc­e of decades of impunity given by the Israeli government to settler terrorism", the PLO said in a statement.

Abbas called for an investigat­ion by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court in The Hague.

The US State Department condemned the "vicious terrorist attack" in "the strongest possible terms," urging Israel to "apprehend the murderers" and calling on both sides to "avoid escalating tensions".

As Palestinia­n protests spread following the main weekly prayers in West Bank mosques, Israeli troops shot and wounded one protester during clashes in the city of Hebron, the army said.

Several thousand people also took to the streets in Duma for the funeral of the toddler, whose body was wrapped in a Palestinia­n flag.

The family's small home of brick and concrete was blackened and gutted by fire, a Star of David along with "revenge" and "long live the Messiah" spray-painted in Hebrew on the walls.

According to Palestinia­n security officials, four suspected settlers set fire to the house at the entrance to the village before dawn and fled to a nearby Jewish settlement. The masked assailants reportedly hurled Molotov cocktails through the home's windows which were left open because of the summer heat.

The Israeli military and army radio said two homes had been torched by two assailants, with the child killed and four family members badly burnt.

Palestinia­n sources said those wounded included the toddler's parents -- mother Riham, 26, and father Saad -- as well as fouryear-old brother Ahmed.

The mother was in critical condition with third-degree burns covering 90 percent of her body, an Israeli doctor told public radio.

The identity of the fourth person wounded as reported by the military was not immediatel­y clear.

In the call to Abbas, Netanyahu said "everyone in Israel was shocked by the reprehensi­ble terrorism against the Dawabsha family", his office said.

"We must fight terrorism together, regardless of which side it comes from," he added. Both Netanyahu and President Reuven Rivlin visited the Israeli hospital where the family were fighting for their lives, while Israel's chief rabbi, David Lau, said "all Jews condemn this despicable murder".

Vowing revenge, however, the Palestinia­n Islamist movement Hamas said the attack "makes the occupier's soldiers and settlers legitimate targets everywhere".

Israeli authoritie­s mobilised a large deployment in Jerusalem's Old City around the flashpoint Al-Aqsa mosque and barred men under 50 years old from entering the complex.

The arson attack follows days of tensions over West Bank settlement­s, with rightwing groups opposing the demolition of two buildings under constructi­on that the Israeli High Court said were illegal.

The demolition began on Wednesday, but Netanyahu the same day authorised the immediate constructi­on of 300 settler homes in the same area, angering Palestinia­ns.

 ??  ?? A man shows a picture of 18-month-old Palestinia­n toddler Ali Saad Dawabsha who died when his family house was set on fire by Jewish settlers on Friday. AFP
A man shows a picture of 18-month-old Palestinia­n toddler Ali Saad Dawabsha who died when his family house was set on fire by Jewish settlers on Friday. AFP

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