Israeli
forces fire at stone-hurling Palestinian protesters after several
Palestinians target IDF post with firebombs • Two Palestinians killed,
another injured • Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon: We won't allow
shooting of any sort toward our citizens or our forces.
Israeli troops patrol
outside the West Bank city of Tulkarem on Wednesday.
|
Photo credit: Shmuel Buchris |
Israeli forces shot and killed two teenage
Palestinian protesters late Wednesday after Palestinians attacked an
Israel Defense Forces post near Tulkarem, raising tensions already
heightened by the death of Palestinian prisoner Maysara Abu Hamdiya, 64,
and renewed fighting between Israel and militants in the Gaza Strip.
The dead teens were later named as 17-year-old
Amar Nasser, and 18-year-old Naji Bilbisi. Another Palestinian youth
was lightly wounded near Tulkarem during the same incident.
The late-night casualties capped a day of
rioting throughout the West Bank in protest against Abu Hamdiya's death
from cancer, and raised the likelihood of further unrest in the
Palestinian territories Thursday.
Mohammed Ayyad, a spokesman for the
Palestinian Red Crescent, said the 17-year-old Palestinian was killed in
a clash between the IDF and Palestinian stone-throwers at a checkpoint
near Tulkarem. He was hit by a bullet in the chest, Ayyad said. The body
of the second Palestinian protester was discovered early Thursday, Army
Radio reported.
The Israeli military said several Palestinians
had hurled firebombs at a military post near Tulkarem, and soldiers at
the post fired a live round at the protesters, hitting two. The army
said it was reviewing the circumstances of the incident, and looking
into the possibility that the protesters had also used live fire.
Riots began to erupt in Hebron on Thursday as
residents of the West Bank prepared for three funerals — Nasser and
Bilbisi were to be buried in Tulkarm and Abu Hamdiya, whose autopsy has
been completed, was to be buried in Hebron. Israeli security forces were
expecting large-scale disruptions as the funerals got underway.
A retired general, Abu Hamdiya had been in
Israeli prisons since 2002 and was serving a life sentence for his role
in a foiled attempt to bomb a busy cafe in Jerusalem in 2002. He died
Tuesday morning in an Israeli hospital of what were described as
complications resulting from throat cancer. After his death, Palestinian
prisoners in several prisons rioted and some 4,600 Palestinian
prisoners began a hunger strike. The Palestinians accuse Israel of
denying Abu Hamdiya medical care, an allegation Israel rejects outright.
The Israel Prison Service braced for further
disturbances, but said that while the prisoners are returning their
allocated meals, they still have plenty of independently purchased food.
A senior Palestinian security official told
Israel Hayom on Wednesday that Palestinian forces had been instructed
not to allow any violent disturbances in the West Bank. Palestinian
sources also confirmed that Abu Hamdiya's body had been handed over to
his family for burial.
Health Ministry spokeswoman Einav Shimron
Grinbaum said an autopsy performed Wednesday found a cancerous growth in
Abu Hamdiyeh's throat and secondary cancerous growths in his neck,
chest, lungs, liver and spinal cord. She said hospital records showed he
was a heavy smoker. The head of the Palestinian pathological institute
also participated in the autopsy, she said.
Early Wednesday, Palestinian militants
launched several rockets into southern Israel and Israeli aircraft
struck targets in the Gaza Strip in the heaviest exchange of fire
between the sides since the cease-fire that ended Operation Pillar of
Defense last November.
Several rockets were fired from Gaza early on
Thursday but only one exploded in Israel, causing no injuries, the
military said. It said the other projectiles exploded prematurely inside
Gaza.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned that Israel will defend itself against attacks from Gaza.
"If the quiet is violated, we will respond strongly,"
Netanyahu said during a meeting with visiting Norwegian Foreign Minister
Espen Barth Eide. "The security of Israel's citizens is my chief
concern and we will know how to defend the security of our people."
There were no casualties in these attacks, but
the violence threatened to shatter the calm that has prevailed for more
than four months.
Israel's new Defense Minister, Moshe (Bogie) Ya'alon, a former IDF chief of staff, also issued a stern warning.
"We will not allow shooting of any sort, even sporadic, toward our citizens and our forces," Ya'alon said in a statement.
A small al-Qaida-influenced group was suspected of instigating the rocket fire, which coincided with unrest in the West Bank.
A small al-Qaida-influenced group was suspected of instigating the rocket fire, which coincided with unrest in the West Bank.
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