10 Palestinians killed, dozens shot in Israel West Bank raid

Published February 22, 2023
Palestinian supporters of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine take part in a march to denounce the killing of Palestinians by the Israeli army in Nablus and to support Palestinians in Israeli jails, in Gaza City, on February 22. — AFP
Palestinian supporters of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine take part in a march to denounce the killing of Palestinians by the Israeli army in Nablus and to support Palestinians in Israeli jails, in Gaza City, on February 22. — AFP

Israeli troops killed 10 Palestinians, including a teenager, on Wednesday in a raid on the occupied West Bank city of Nablus, while more than 80 suffered gunshot wounds, the Palestinian health ministry said.

The Israeli army said the raid targeted “suspects in a hideout apartment” who were accused of shootings in the West Bank. It added troops came under live fire but suffered no casualties.

Top Palestinian official Hussein Al Sheikh decried the incursion as a “massacre” and called for “international protection for our people”.

The death toll is equal to that of an Israeli army raid last month in Jenin, further north, which was the deadliest West Bank operation since at least 2005.

The Israeli military said one of the wanted suspects who had fled the building was “neutralised”, along with two others who had opened fire at the property.

The suspects and Israeli forces “exchanged fire and at some point, we upgraded our efforts. There were also rockets that were fired on the house” by the army, spokesman Richard Hecht told journalists.

Rocks, explosive devices and Molotov cocktails were hurled at the troops, an earlier army statement said.

The Palestinian health ministry said those killed “as a result of the occupation’s aggression on Nablus” were aged between 16 and 72.

‘Heinous’

A further 82 people were admitted to multiple hospitals with gunshot wounds, Palestinian health officials said.

Mostafa Shaheen, a Nablus resident, said he was surprised to hear explosions at around 9:30am.

“A large number of soldiers stormed the area and besieged the whole area,” he told AFP. “We kept hearing the explosions and gunfire.”

Huge crowds gathered outside Nablus’ Rafidia hospital, waiting for news of dozens of casualties being treated at the facility.

The wounded include Palestine TV journalist Mohammed Al Khatib, who was shot in the hand, his colleague told AFP.

The Islamic Jihad group said one of its commanders was killed “in a heroic battle against the Israeli occupation army and its special forces”.

The Lions’ Den, a local band of freedom fighters, said six of those killed were members of various factions.

Troops withdrew from the city after three hours, an AFP journalist said, and in the afternoon, a huge crowd of mourners, including armed men, gathered in Nablus for a funeral.

The Palestinian Red Crescent Society said its medics had treated 250 cases of tear gas inhalation and dozens of gunshot wounds.

The Arab League said the raid amounted to a “heinous crime”.

“The occupation authorities and the far-right Israeli government are responsible for this horrible massacre,” said Saeed Abu Ali, the Arab League’s assistant secretary general for Palestinian affairs.

Neighbouring Jordan, meanwhile, called for calm, saying it would “work intensely with all parties to achieve this”.

‘Ominous signs’

The latest deadly Israeli incursion follows an appeal by the United Nations Middle East peace envoy, Tor Wennesland, for the violence to be halted as an “urgent priority”.

“We have seen ominous signs of what awaits if we fail to address the current instability,” he told the UN Security Council on Monday.

Since the start of this year, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has claimed the lives of 59 Palestinian adults and children, including fighters and civilians.

Nine Israeli civilians, including three children, one Ukrainian civilian and a police officer have been killed over the same period, according to an AFP tally based on official sources from both sides.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke on Saturday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and separately with Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas, calling on both to “restore calm”.

Last month’s visit by Washington’s top envoy to Israel and the Palestinian territories has been followed by further violence and rifts between officials.

Israel has occupied the Palestinian territory since the Six-Day War of 1967. Last year was the deadliest year in the territory since the United Nations started tracking casualties in 2005.

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