Two Palestinians were shot and killed in separate incidents Thursday in
the West Bank as Israel announced plans to build a new fence near the
flashpoint city of Hebron in an effort to contain a two-month spate of
violence.
In the first incident, the Israeli military said "a violent riot
erupted" when troops raided the village of Qattana overnight to search
for ammunition and arrest suspected assailants. The Palestinians hurled
firebombs and stones at troops, according to the army.
Troops shot 21-year-old Yehya Taha in the head, according to
Palestinian health ministry spokesman Mohammed Awawdeh, and the youth
later died of his wounds in a Ramallah hospital. Later Thursday, Israeli
border guards shot and killed a Palestinian attacker wielding a knife
near the West Bank city of Nablus. Police spokeswoman Luba Samri said
the man got out of a taxi near a military post and began running toward
officers, brandishing a knife. No Israelis were hurt in that attack,
Samri added.
The Palestinian health ministry identified the
assailant as 51-year-old Samir Seresi. The two deaths were the latest in
a two-month wave of violence. Since mid-September, 19 Israelis have
died in Palestinian attacks, mostly stabbings and shootings. At least 93
Palestinians have also died, including 58 said by Israel to be
attackers. The others died in clashes with Israeli forces.
In an effort to quell the violence, Defense
Minister Moshe Yaalon announced Wednesday that Israel will build a
fortified fence near Hebron, a southern West Bank city that has been a
flashpoint in the current unrest. He said the fence would fill in a gap
in the barrier Israel began building in the early 2000s in response to
Palestinian attacks.
Yaalon told lawmakers that construction of the
fence will take a year. The fence will have similar technology as the
recently constructed Israeli fence on the Egyptian frontier meant to
deter infiltration of militants or migrants seeking asylum. Egypt is
currently struggling to put down an Islamic insurgency in the volatile
north of its Sinai Peninsula, which borders Israel.
Also Thursday, Israeli troops seized eight public
transportation buses in the West Bank city of Nablus, according to
drivers at the Al-Tamimi company. The military said the buses were
intended to ferry Palestinians to checkpoints for demonstrations. Most
Palestinian clashes with Israeli troops occur at checkpoints spread
throughout the West Bank.
Despite heightened security, according to a senior
military officer, the army has proposed easing restrictions on
Palestinians and providing ammunition to Palestinian security forces to
avert attacks. Government officials, however, have rejected the idea, an
Israeli official said. Both the officer and the official spoke on
condition of anonymity because the offer has not been made public.
Israel says the unrest stems from incitement by
Palestinians. The Palestinians say it's rooted in frustrations over
Israel's nearly half a century-long occupation. Palestinians accuse
Israel of using excessive force in suppressing violence.
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