Palestinian killed in new West Bank clashes

Palestinian killed in new West Bank clashes

JERUSALEM - The Associated Press

Palestinian medical personnel, at a hospital in the West Bank town of Hebron, and relatives stand near the body of 21-year old Imad Jawabreh who died after being hit in the chest by bullets near Al-Aroub refugee camp. AFP Photo

Israeli troops shot and killed a Palestinian demonstrator in clashes in the West Bank on Nov. 11 as Israel tightened security following a pair of attacks that took two Israeli lives the day before.

Clashes erupted near the city of Hebron where about 150 Palestinian demonstrators were throwing rocks and Molotov cocktails at Israeli soldiers, the army said.

The soldiers' attempts to disperse the crowd using tear gas and rubber bullets failed, "prompting the troops to open fire," the military said.

The Palestinian man was seriously wounded and died of gunshots, said hospital officials in the West Bank.

Palestinian hospital officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to media, said the man died of gunshot wounds. They had no information on his identity.

The shooting happened a day after a Palestinian from the West Bank city of Nablus stabbed and killed a 20-year-old Israeli soldier at a crowded Tel Aviv train station and another Palestinian assailant stabbed three people at a bus stop next to a West Bank settlement, killing a 25-year-old Israeli woman and wounding two others.

The new spate of violence comes amid rising tensions spawned by conflicting claims to a Jerusalem holy site and the aftermath of this summer's bloody Gaza war, in which more than 2,100 Palestinians and 70 Israelis were killed.

Palestinians in east Jerusalem have been staging violent protests, alleging that Jewish zealots are secretly trying to gain control of the site, known to Jews as the Temple Mount and to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary.

Complicating the situation, tensions also spiked following the killing of an Israeli Arab by a policeman in the northern Israeli town of Kfar Kana on Nov. 8.

Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said that in response to the two deadly attacks Nov. 10 several police units had been mobilized in major Israeli cities, including Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, and were being deployed "in public places."

The Israeli military said it sent reinforcements to the West Bank, following what it called "new security assessments."

Israeli media debated whether the country was on the verge of a new Palestinian uprising or intifada, similar to those from the late 1980s and the first decade of the 2000s that took hundreds of lives.

"This is the same soundtrack that we all remember from the days of the intifadas," wrote Alex Fishman in Tuesday's edition of Yediot Ahronot newspaper. "You haven't yet had time to come to terms with the morning's terror attack and you're already ... in the next one."

Earlier Nov. 11, an explosion at the Keren Shalom crossing point on the Israel-Gaza border killed one person, health authorities in Gaza said.

Munir Ghalban, head of the Palestinian side of the crossing, described it as an accident. The Israeli military said it was unaware of any "security incident" in the area.