Tag: West Bank

  • Palestinian Leadership Condemns Israeli Deadly Raid in West Bank

    RAMALLAH, Aug. 1 (Xinhua) — The Palestinian National Authority (PNA) has condemned the killing of two Palestinians Monday at the hands of Israeli forces in the West Bank.

    “This is an Israeli attempt to create an atmosphere of escalation before September,” said Nabil Abu Rdineh, spokesman for the Palestinian presidency, referring to the month in which the Palestinians will ask the United Nations to vote on their state.

    Early in the morning, Israeli troops shot dead two Palestinians and wounded three others during a military operation.

    The Israeli army raided Qalandiya refugee camp between the cities of Ramallah and Jerusalem in a routine operation to arrest wanted Palestinians, Israeli media reported.

    During the operation, clashes erupted between families and the Israeli force, where soldiers responded with live fire to people throwing rocks and empty glasses.

    The shooting killed two and wounded three Palestinians. An Israeli army spokesperson said that five soldiers were lightly wounded.

    One of the dead is an officer in the Palestinian National Authority, which controls the West Bank, security sources said.

    The Israeli army raids Palestinian controlled areas in the West Bank on daily basis, cracking down on what Israel calls wanted activists. Deadly clashes during these raids are unusual.

     

  • Hamas, Fatah Sign Reconciliation Agreement

    Hamas, Fatah Sign Reconciliation Agreement

    Beijing (Xinhuanet): The Palestinian rival groups Hamas and Fatah have signed their reconciliation agreement. But a last minute disagreement over protocol is casting shadow on the durability of the accord.

    The Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas, who heads Fatah, and the Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal were in Cairo on Wednesday to endorse the deal to end a four-year rift.

    Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal, right, gives a speach as Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, left, sits next to Egypt's intelligence chief Morad Mwafi, second left, and Egypt's Foriegn Minister Nabil El-Arabi, during the reconciliation meeting in Cairo on Wednesday (AP photo)

    But the ceremony was delayed by a disagreement over protocol shortly before it began. It’s about whether Khaled Meshaal should sit on the podium with Mahmoud Abbas or down among other Palestinian delegates in the hall.

    Officials from all the Palestinian factions had earlier signed the deal. And Meshaal and Abbas were expected to endorse it at the ceremony. It was not immediately clear why they were not going to put their own signatures to it.

    A spokesman for Abbas said the deal was signed on behalf of Fatah by Azzam al-Ahmad, a Fatah Central Committee Member, and for Hamas by Mousa Abu Marzouk, Deputy Head of Hamas Political Bureau. Palestinian officials said Wednesday’s ceremony was a “celebration”.

    The deal calls for forming an interim government to run the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip and prepare for a general election within a year. Palestinians see this reconciliation as crucial for their drive to establish an independent state in the occupied territories.

  • Palestinian Official Accuses Israel of Working to Thwart Unity

    Ramallah (Xinhua): A Palestinian official on Sunday accused Israel of working to thwart President Mahmoud Abbas’ initiative to visit the Gaza Strip that aims to restore national unity.

    “Israel is interested in blocking Abbas’ choices regarding the reconciliation,” said Azzam al-Ahmad, a senior leader of Abbas’ Fatah party.

    Abbas said recently that he would go to Gaza to declare a unity government with its rival the Hamas movement which has been controlling Gaza since it routed pro-Abbas forces in 2007.

    An Israeli newspaper reported on Sunday that Abbas was likely to cancel his visit, which has not yet been scheduled, after the military wing of the Hamas said they could not secure his safety once he arrives in Gaza.

    “Abbas will head for Gaza as soon as Hamas accepts his initiative,” al-Ahmad said, urging the Hamas not to indirectly aid Israel by putting obstacles on Abbas’ plans.

    Abbas wants to form a government of independents to take care of the Palestinian affairs until national elections take place after six months, while the Hamas, which won last parliamentary elections, said it wants to negotiate with the Fatah and reach an agreement on controversial issues before forming any government and going to new polls.

    Ismail Haneya, the head of the Hamas government, invited Abbas to visit Gaza earlier this month. Abbas accepted the invitation, but said he would go only to announce the formation of the government.

  • Israeli Settler Groups Protest Against Police Shootings

    Jerusalem (Xinhua) — Right-wing activists on March 3 held protests in what they called a “Day of Rage” at several locations in Jerusalem, intersections in the West Bank and elsewhere within Israel over the razing of illegal structures at a West Bank outpost on Monday.

    Settlement movement leaders from the Council of Judea and Samaria Communities, however, said they opposed the protests, claiming those behind them were independent right-wing militants.

    On Thursday police and Border Police were out in force at several locations, but had their hands full trying to quell a number of demonstrations before they developed into major confrontations.

    Settlement residents and supporters said they were furious over security forces’ use of plastic bullets and what they said were brutal tactics in order to break up protests against the demolition of several unauthorized homes and shacks at Gilad Farm.

    Police arrested eight settlers, and some 15 protesters were injured in the tussles on Monday. As well, police in Jerusalem hauled in over 20 protesters for setting tires alight and blocking traffic at the entrance to the city later that day.

    Early Thursday morning, some 15 protesters briefly succeeded in burning tires at the entrance to Jerusalem and along the main highway to block traffic between Jerusalem and the coastal region, according to Army Radio.

    Protesters also managed to briefly block a rail line between Ben-Gurion International Airport and the nearby city of Modi’in, according to The Jerusalem Post newspaper, before police and Israel Railways officials stopped them.

    Some settler elements also carried out what they termed “price tag operations” — acts of vandalism against Palestinians over the government’s actions against settlers.

    Palestinians from a village near Ramallah told local media that settlers burned a vehicle in their village overnight.

    “We heard an unusual noise outside. We went out and saw six or seven settlers standing near the car of one of our neighbors and setting it on fire,” a resident said.

    However, right-wing Knesset parliament member Michael Ben Ari said Internal Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovitch was responsible for any violence on the part of settlers.

    “Whoever backs officers who open fire at settlers should take into account that he is causing rage and despair,” Ben Ari said.

    Left-wing advocacy groups Yesh Din and B’Tselem on Tuesday called on the army to do their utmost to protect Palestinians from the Israeli protesters.

    “We are asking you urgently to allocate all necessary forces to protect life, limb and property of Palestinians during the ‘day of rage,’” Yesh Din’s Ido Tamari said, according to the Ha’aretz newspaper.