Israeli troops have arrested the speaker of the Palestinian parliament and Hamas member Aziz Dweik during a wave of detentions linked to a massive manhunt for three kidnapped teenagers.
An Israeli army statement on Monday said more than 40 suspects in the West Bank, "including Hamas leadership and operatives", had been arrested, bringing the total number of arrests in the search to at least 150.
Amani Sarahna, a spokeswoman for the Ramallah-based Palestinian Prisoners Club, said 60 people were held overnight but said the wave of arrests was "still ongoing" in the southern West Bank city of Hebron.
One Palestinian was killed on Sunday when Israeli troops clashed with Palestinians on the streets of Ramallah.
The Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, has accused the Islamic militant group Hamas of being behind the kidnapping of three teenagers – including a US citizen – who went missing nearly three days ago. Hamas has denied responsibility, despite some of its members welcoming the kidnapping.
Among those arrested were Hamas members of the newly forged Palestinian parliament and several prisoners recently released by Israel.
The US secretary of state, John Kerry, condemned the kidnapping of the boys, issuing a statement calling for the release of Gil-ad Sha'er, Eyal Yifrach and Naftali Frankel and apparently backing Israeli claims of Hamas involvement.
"We are still seeking details on the parties responsible for this despicable terrorist act, although many indications point to Hamas's involvement," Kerry said.
"As we gather this information, we reiterate our position that Hamas is a terrorist organisation known for its attacks on innocent civilians and which has used kidnapping in the past."
Amid rapidly rising tensions in the West Bank, the Israeli military has flooded the Hebron area with several thousand additional troops, deployed extra anti-rocket units in two southern cities and called up several hundred reservists.
The kidnapping, and the scale of the operation to recover the boys and root out those responsible, is one of the most serious security incidents in recent memory.
Israeli soldiers have swamped Palestinian villages around Hebron and in effect closed off the city. Reinforcements of paratroopers were drafted in to makeshift camps circling the city, and observation balloons launched to help with the search.
In the village of Beit Einoun, soldiers searched balconies and rooms as a crowd observed from a distance.
"Why are they doing this?" said a man named Marwan. A youth in a Real Madrid football shirt, who declined to give his name, added: "Do they think the missing boys are in this neighbourhood?
"They are only here because a burned-out car [which it has been suggested was linked to the kidnapping] was found 2km away.
"They are trying to put pressure on us and put pressure on the Palestinian government."
In nearby Haloul, close to the entrance to Hebron, Fadi al-Hadobyi said soldiers had come during the night to confiscate video footage from the closed-circuit television cameras in central Hebron and made multiple arrests.
As he talked several young Palestinian men darted past the entrance to his shop pursued by Israeli army vehicles and a group of soldiers on foot, the sound of teargas canisters and plastic-coated bullets being fired echoing behind them.
With no obvious progress in the hunt for the three missing youths, who were abducted while hitchhiking home from their religious schools in West Bank settlements, the focus has turned to an alleged failure by police to pass on an alert for as much as five hours, according to some reports.
Israel's police service has come under fire for ignoring for several critical hours a desperate phone message from one of the teenagers, who called an emergency line on Thursday night and said: "We're being kidnapped."
Speaking to his cabinet on Sunday, Netanyahu said only one group should be held accountable.
"Those who perpetrated the abduction of our youths were members of Hamas, the same Hamas that Abu Mazen [the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas] made a unity government with. This has severe repercussions," he said.
The Hamas leadership has furiously denied Netanyahu's allegations, which were described by a spokesman as "stupid". Other Hamas members praised the apparent kidnapping but stopped short of accepting responsibility.
The crisis has fed into already heightened tensions between Israel and the new Palestinian government, headed by Abbas but backed by Hamas.
Original Article
Source: theguardian.com/
Author: Peter Beaumont in Hebron and agencies
An Israeli army statement on Monday said more than 40 suspects in the West Bank, "including Hamas leadership and operatives", had been arrested, bringing the total number of arrests in the search to at least 150.
Amani Sarahna, a spokeswoman for the Ramallah-based Palestinian Prisoners Club, said 60 people were held overnight but said the wave of arrests was "still ongoing" in the southern West Bank city of Hebron.
One Palestinian was killed on Sunday when Israeli troops clashed with Palestinians on the streets of Ramallah.
The Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, has accused the Islamic militant group Hamas of being behind the kidnapping of three teenagers – including a US citizen – who went missing nearly three days ago. Hamas has denied responsibility, despite some of its members welcoming the kidnapping.
Among those arrested were Hamas members of the newly forged Palestinian parliament and several prisoners recently released by Israel.
The US secretary of state, John Kerry, condemned the kidnapping of the boys, issuing a statement calling for the release of Gil-ad Sha'er, Eyal Yifrach and Naftali Frankel and apparently backing Israeli claims of Hamas involvement.
"We are still seeking details on the parties responsible for this despicable terrorist act, although many indications point to Hamas's involvement," Kerry said.
"As we gather this information, we reiterate our position that Hamas is a terrorist organisation known for its attacks on innocent civilians and which has used kidnapping in the past."
Amid rapidly rising tensions in the West Bank, the Israeli military has flooded the Hebron area with several thousand additional troops, deployed extra anti-rocket units in two southern cities and called up several hundred reservists.
The kidnapping, and the scale of the operation to recover the boys and root out those responsible, is one of the most serious security incidents in recent memory.
Israeli soldiers have swamped Palestinian villages around Hebron and in effect closed off the city. Reinforcements of paratroopers were drafted in to makeshift camps circling the city, and observation balloons launched to help with the search.
In the village of Beit Einoun, soldiers searched balconies and rooms as a crowd observed from a distance.
"Why are they doing this?" said a man named Marwan. A youth in a Real Madrid football shirt, who declined to give his name, added: "Do they think the missing boys are in this neighbourhood?
"They are only here because a burned-out car [which it has been suggested was linked to the kidnapping] was found 2km away.
"They are trying to put pressure on us and put pressure on the Palestinian government."
In nearby Haloul, close to the entrance to Hebron, Fadi al-Hadobyi said soldiers had come during the night to confiscate video footage from the closed-circuit television cameras in central Hebron and made multiple arrests.
As he talked several young Palestinian men darted past the entrance to his shop pursued by Israeli army vehicles and a group of soldiers on foot, the sound of teargas canisters and plastic-coated bullets being fired echoing behind them.
With no obvious progress in the hunt for the three missing youths, who were abducted while hitchhiking home from their religious schools in West Bank settlements, the focus has turned to an alleged failure by police to pass on an alert for as much as five hours, according to some reports.
Israel's police service has come under fire for ignoring for several critical hours a desperate phone message from one of the teenagers, who called an emergency line on Thursday night and said: "We're being kidnapped."
Speaking to his cabinet on Sunday, Netanyahu said only one group should be held accountable.
"Those who perpetrated the abduction of our youths were members of Hamas, the same Hamas that Abu Mazen [the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas] made a unity government with. This has severe repercussions," he said.
The Hamas leadership has furiously denied Netanyahu's allegations, which were described by a spokesman as "stupid". Other Hamas members praised the apparent kidnapping but stopped short of accepting responsibility.
The crisis has fed into already heightened tensions between Israel and the new Palestinian government, headed by Abbas but backed by Hamas.
Original Article
Source: theguardian.com/
Author: Peter Beaumont in Hebron and agencies
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