Gun battle in West Bank as Israeli search for missing teenagers continues

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jun/19/gun-battle-west-bank-jenin-israel-students

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Israeli forces traded gunfire with Palestinians on Thursday in the fiercest street battles in the occupied West Bank since a search began for three Israeli teenagers missing for a week.

Hospital officials said three Palestinians suffered bullet wounds in the overnight clashes in Jenin, a militant stronghold and the scene of deadly fighting during a Palestinian uprising a decade ago. There were no reported Israeli casualties.

A military statement said about 300 Palestinians, some of whom "hurled explosives and opened fire", confronted soldiers who entered Jenin looking for the three seminary students.

"The soldiers responded with live fire, identifying hits," the statement said. It said 30 "terror suspects" were detained in the West Bank, bringing to 280 the number of Palestinians taken into custody over the past week.

Israel says the Islamist group Hamas abducted the students on Thursday last week when the three – Gil-Ad Shaer and US-Israeli national Naftali Fraenkel, both aged 16, and Eyal Yifrah, 19 – were hitchhiking near a Jewish settlement.

It says the aim of the West Bank operation is to find the students and deal a substantial blow to Hamas, a group dedicated to Israel's destruction.

A statement issued by the office of Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, accused Israel of using the teenagers' disappearance as "a pretext to impose tough punishment against our people and besiege them", in violation of international humanitarian law.

Israeli raids have spread from house-to-house searches in Hebron, a flashpoint town in the area where the three went missing, to raids across the West Bank targeting institutions believed to provide funding and other support for Hamas.

"The policy of collective punishment conducted by the occupation government against our people and our land requires condemnation by the whole world," the Palestinian presidential statement said.

While military operations inside Hebron continued, the heavy troop presence around the city appeared to have been scaled back. Some roadblocks at entrances to the city were left unmanned, allowing vehicles to enter and leave freely. Paratrooper platoons that had camped by a road nearby were gone.

"We know more today than we did a few days ago, but we still have a way to go," the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, said at a West Bank military headquarters near the site where the teens are believed to have been abducted.

As part of the crackdown, Israel said on Thursday it was banning the British-based charity Islamic Relief Worldwide (IRW) from operating in the occupied West Bank. It accuses IRW of being a funding source for Hamas.

No comment was immediately available from IRW in Britain. Officials in an affiliate office in the Gaza Strip, International Relief in Palestine, said they had no information about the Israeli decision.

The military said soldiers had searched about 900 locations. There has been no word from the missing teenagers nor any public claim of responsibility or ransom demands, including from Hamas. However, Hamas has not issued any denial of involvement and on Thursday appeared to praise the apparent abduction.

"Regardless of who was responsible for the operation … the Palestinian people have the right to use all forms of resistance in order to liberate land and people," the Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said at a news conference in the Gaza Strip.

Hamas's armed wing in Gaza said at least six members of its group were killed in the collapse of a tunnel the group had dug close to the border with Israel to infiltrate the Jewish state.

Abbas roundly condemned the kidnappers on Wednesday and promised to hold those responsible to account. His words in turn were denounced by Hamas and other factions, who accused him of betraying the national cause.

On Tuesday, Hamas and 10 other Palestinian factions issued a joint communique warning Israel that they would not "stay handcuffed" in the face of its West Bank dragnet – a threat of armed resistance.

Security experts expect the frustration of ordinary Palestinians at Israeli restrictions in the West Bank to mount as the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan is due to begin on 28 or 29 June.