New Israeli-Palestinian violence after arrests

(Jerusalem) Israel and the Palestinian territories experienced new deadly violence on Sunday evening, shortly after the announcement by the Jewish State of the arrest of two Palestinians suspected of having killed three Israelis on Thursday.

Updated yesterday at 4:15 p.m.

Two Palestinians were killed and another was injured in various incidents in the occupied West Bank and Jerusalem, while an Israeli policeman was injured, according to the military, hospital sources and a Palestinian ministry.

A Palestinian who tried to enter Israel through the separation barrier from the occupied West Bank was killed by the Israeli army, the army and a hospital said.


Photo Maya Alleruzzo, Associated Press

An Israeli Border Police officer runs as he secures the area near the site of a knife attack at Damascus Gate in Jerusalem’s Old City.

In a statement, the army said it had “identified a (person) trying to pass the security barrier […] near Tulkarem. Soldiers shot him “according to the procedures”.

A spokesman for the Israeli Sheba Hospital later told AFP that the Palestinian had died of his injuries.

Arrest of two suspects

Also in the evening, a man stabbed an Israeli policeman near the Old City of Jerusalem before being shot and wounded by Israeli forces, Israeli police and medics said. The policeman was taken to hospital.

Finally, a Palestinian armed with a knife entered an Israeli settlement in the West Bank, where a resident shot him, the Israeli army said.

“A terrorist armed with a knife entered the settlement (of Tekoa, located between Jerusalem and Bethlehem), and a civilian who tried to stop him shot him,” the army said.

The Palestinian health ministry said the 17-year-old assailant died.

This violence comes after the announcement by the police of the arrest of “two terrorists who murdered three Israeli civilians during the attack” carried out Thursday in the city of Elad, located near the metropolis of Tel Aviv.


PHOTO JACK GUEZ, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Three victims lost their lives in Thursday’s attack in Elad.

The police had launched a vast manhunt to find two Palestinians aged 19 and 20, from the village of Roummaneh in the Jenin region, in the occupied West Bank.

According to witnesses, the assailants jumped out of a car and attacked passers-by with axes before fleeing in the vehicle. Three Israelis were killed and four injured, one of whom is in critical condition.

Several attacks have targeted Israelis since March 22, in Israel and the West Bank, Palestinian territory occupied by the Israeli army since 1967.

The two suspects in Thursday’s attack were found near the town of Elad. They surrendered and made confessions, an Israeli military official said Sunday.

They had entered Israel through a porous separation barrier from the West Bank hours before the attack, the military source added, calling their infiltration a “failure” for the Israeli army.

The attack in Elad on Thursday took place on the day of the 74and anniversary of the creation of the State of Israel, which for the Palestinians represents a “Nakba” (“catastrophe”, in Arabic) and is synonymous with exodus for hundreds of thousands of them.

Hamas – an Islamist movement that controls the Israeli-blockaded Palestinian enclave of Gaza – and Islamic Jihad hailed a “heroic” attack, saying it was a consequence of tensions around the Mosque compound in East Jerusalem, Palestinian sector of the Holy City occupied by Israel.

Status quo

In recent weeks, clashes between Israeli police and Palestinians have left some 300 injured mainly on the esplanade of the Mosques in East Jerusalem. This site, the third place of Islam, houses the Al-Aqsa mosque.

Thursday, after the return of Jewish worshipers to the esplanade, also considered the holiest place in Judaism under its name of Temple Mount, clashes broke out between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli police.

Under an unspoken status quo, non-Muslims can go to the esplanade but not pray there.

A growing number of Jews go there, and the fact that some of them pray there raises fears that this status quo will be challenged among many Muslims, even though Israel has repeatedly wanted to maintain it.

In total, since March 22, 18 people have been killed in anti-Israeli attacks in Israel and the West Bank, carried out by Israeli Arabs and Palestinians.

In the wake of the first attacks, Israeli forces carried out operations in the West Bank, particularly in the Jenin region where the attackers came from. Twenty-nine Palestinians, including attackers, have since been killed.


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