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Saturday, 31 August 2024
Israeli police kill top Hamas commander near Jenin as West Bank assault enters third day.
Israeli police in the occupied West Bank killed Wassem Hazem, who the IDF said was the commander of Hamas in Jenin.
Hamas confirmed Hazem's death, as well as the deaths of two other fighters who were travelling with him in a car.
What's next?
Israel
is continuing its assault on the West Bank, sending hundreds of troops
and police officers into the occupied territory while fighting still
rages in Gaza.
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Israeli forces killed a local Hamas commander in the flashpoint city of Jenin on Friday as they pressed a major operation in the occupied West Bank for a third day, the Israeli military said.
WARNING: This article contains footage some viewers may find disturbing.
The
Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said the Israel Border Police had killed
Wassem Hazem, who they said was the head of Hamas in Jenin and was
involved in shooting and bombing attacks in the Palestinian territory.
Two
other Hamas gunmen who tried to escape the car they were all travelling
in were killed by a drone, the IDF said, adding that weapons,
explosives and large sums of cash were found in the vehicle.
Hamas confirmed the death of all three men, who it said were members of its Al-Qassam Brigades armed wing.
In the
village of Zababdeh, just outside Jenin, a burnt-out car riddled with
bullet holes stood against a wall where the driver crashed the vehicle
after being pursued by an Israeli special forces unit, according to
residents.
Villager Saif
Ghannam, 25, said one of the two other men who escaped from the vehicle
was killed just outside his house by a small drone strike that shattered
nearby windows, while a second man was killed a short distance away.
Mr
Ghannam said Israeli forces had removed the bodies, but large pools of
blood remained on the ground where he said the men were killed.
The
announcement came as Israeli forces continued a large-scale operation
involving hundreds of troops and police officers that was launched in
the early hours of Wednesday morning in Jenin and Tulkarm, another
volatile city in the northern West Bank, as well as the Jordan Valley.
Israeli
armoured personnel carriers backed by helicopters and drones pushed
into Jenin and Tulkarm on Friday, while armoured bulldozers ploughed up
roads in what the IDF said was an effort to destroy roadside bombs
planted by Palestinian militant groups.
Hostilities
have escalated in the West Bank while fighting between the IDF and
Hamas still rages in the Gaza Strip, nearly 11 months after Israel
invaded the territory in response to the October 7 terrorist attacks.
Clashes between Israeli forces and the Iranian-backed Hezbollah movement in Lebanon have also intensified in recent months.
At
least 19 Palestinians were killed in the first two days of the West
Bank operation, including the local commander of the Iranian-backed
Islamic Jihad forces in Tulkarm, according to Israeli and Palestinian
authorities.
The deaths have
brought the total number of Palestinians killed in the West Bank since
last October — both combatants and civilians — to more than 660,
according to the UN's humanitarian office, some by Israeli troops and
some by Jewish settlers who have carried out frequent attacks on West
Bank Palestinian communities.
Israel
says Iran provides weapons and support to militant factions in the West
Bank — which has been under Israeli occupation since the 1967 Six-Day
War — and the IDF has as a result cranked up its operations there.
The
British government said on Friday it was "deeply concerned" by Israel's
operation in the West Bank and said there was an urgent need for
de-escalation.
"We recognise
Israel's need to defend itself against security threats, but we are
deeply worried by the methods Israel has employed and by reports of
civilian casualties and the destruction of civilian infrastructure," a
Foreign Office statement said.
The
spokesperson added the UK "strongly condemns settler violence", and
that it was in no-one's interest for further conflict and instability to
spread in the West Bank.
IDF shot UN vehicle due to 'communication error'
Earlier, Israel told the United States that an initial review found that shots were fired at a UN World Food Programme (WFP) vehicle in the Gaza Strip after a "communication error" between Israeli military units, a senior US diplomat said on Thursday.
"We
have urged them to immediately rectify the issues within their system,"
America's deputy UN ambassador Robert Wood told a UN Security Council
meeting on Gaza.
"Israel must
not only take ownership for its mistakes, but also take concrete actions
to ensure the IDF does not fire on UN personnel again."
The
WFP temporarily suspended movement of its employees across Gaza on
Wednesday, saying at least 10 bullets struck one of its clearly marked
vehicles as it approached an Israeli military checkpoint.
WFP
said in a statement that a convoy of two armoured vehicles received
"multiple clearances by Israeli authorities to approach" the Wadi Gaza
bridge checkpoint on Tuesday evening. Bullets hit one of the vehicles,
but no one in it was hurt.
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