Israeli Forces Kill at Least 11 Palestinians in West Bank Clashes

 Palestinians inspect the destruction following an Israeli raid in Jenin city in the occupied West Bank on August 6, 2024. (AFP)
Palestinians inspect the destruction following an Israeli raid in Jenin city in the occupied West Bank on August 6, 2024. (AFP)
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Israeli Forces Kill at Least 11 Palestinians in West Bank Clashes

 Palestinians inspect the destruction following an Israeli raid in Jenin city in the occupied West Bank on August 6, 2024. (AFP)
Palestinians inspect the destruction following an Israeli raid in Jenin city in the occupied West Bank on August 6, 2024. (AFP)

Israeli forces backed by drone strikes killed at least 11 Palestinians in clashes around the volatile West Bank city of Jenin, the military and Palestinian health authorities said, after large scale operations by troops and police.

The military said it conducted two separate air strikes in Jenin, killing four armed fighters. The Palestinian health ministry put the toll from the strike at five.

In addition, the military said soldiers and police killed seven gunmen and wounded a number of others in surrounding areas of the West Bank, including some who had thrown explosive devices towards them.

Footage shared on social media showed a column of armored personnel carriers entering Jenin, one of the most turbulent centers of militant activity in the West Bank, with armored bulldozers digging up roads to locate buried improvised bombs.

In the wake of that raid, Israeli forces surrounded a house in the village of Kafr Qud, close to Jenin. Palestinian health authorities, said two people were killed by Israeli gunfire, with another two wounded.

There were no details on the identity of the dead and it was not immediately clear whether they were members of any of the armed factions.

With Israel bracing for an expected Iranian response to the assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran on July 31, the West Bank violence underscored the multi-front security challenge facing Israeli forces, 10 months after the start of the war with Palestinian militant group Hamas in Gaza.

In a separate incident overnight, the Palestinian health ministry said at least four Palestinians were killed and seven wounded by Israeli fire in the West Bank town of Aqaba, between Jenin and the city of Tubas. Two of the injured were in critical condition.

Among the dead was a 14 year-old boy, killed by gunfire as Israeli forces were withdrawing from the area, the ministry said.

The Tubas Brigades, an armed group, said two of the men killed in the incident were members.

The official Palestinian news agency WAFA said the clashes occurred after Israeli forces surrounded a house in Aqaba and clashed with a group of young men.

Israeli forces have killed at least 615 Palestinians in the West Bank and East Jerusalem since the start of the Gaza war, according to Palestinian health ministry figures. Many have been armed fighters belonging to armed groups fighting Israel but others have been stone-throwing youths or uninvolved civilians.

At the same time, at least 13 Israelis have been killed in Palestinian attacks. On Tuesday a female border guard was wounded in a stabbing by a Palestinian man using a screwdriver during a bus inspection at a checkpoint on Jerusalem's outskirts.

The attacker was shot dead, the police said.



Hamas Names Yahya Sinwar as New Leader in Show of Defiance

Yehya Al-Sinwar (AP)
Yehya Al-Sinwar (AP)
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Hamas Names Yahya Sinwar as New Leader in Show of Defiance

Yehya Al-Sinwar (AP)
Yehya Al-Sinwar (AP)

Hamas on Tuesday named Yahya Sinwar, its top official in Gaza who masterminded the Oct. 7 attacks in Israel, as its new leader in a dramatic sign of the power of the Palestinian militant group's hardline wing after his predecessor was killed in a presumed Israeli strike in Iran, The AP reported.

The selection of Sinwar, a secretive figure close to Iran who worked for years to build up Hamas' military strength, was a defiant signal that the group is prepared to keep fighting after 10 months of destruction from Israel's campaign in Gaza and after the assassination of Sinwar's predecessor, Ismail Haniyeh.

It is also likely to provoke Israel, which has put him at the top of its kill list after the Oct. 7 attack.

The announcement comes at volatile moment. Fears are high of an escalation into a wider regional war, with Iran vowing revenge against Israel over Haniyeh's killing and Lebanon's Hezbollah threatening to retaliate over Israel's killing of one of its top commanders in an airstrike in Beirut last week. American, Egyptian and Qatari mediators are trying to salvage negotiations over a cease-fire and hostage release deal in Gaza, shaken by Haniyeh' killing.

Hamas said in a statement it named Sinwar as the new head of its political bureau to replace Haniyeh, who was killed in a blast that Iran and Hamas blamed on Israel. Israel has not confirmed or denied responsibility. Also last week, Israel said it had confirmed the death of the head of Hamas’ military wing, Mohammed Deif, in a July airstrike in Gaza. Hamas has not confirmed his death.

In reaction to the appointment, Israeli military spokesman Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari told Al-Arabiya television, “There is only one place for Yahya Sinwar, and it is beside Mohammed Deif and the rest of the October 7th terrorists. That is the only place we’re preparing and intending for him.”

Israel's killings of multiple senior officials in Hamas over recent months left Sinwar as the most prominent figure in the group. His selection signals that the leadership on the ground in Gaza — particularly the armed wing known as the Qassam Brigades — has taken over from the leadership in exile, which has traditionally maintained the position of the overall leadership to navigate relations with foreign allies and diplomacy.

Haniyeh, who had lived in self-imposed exile in Qatar since 2019, had played a direct role in negotiations over a ceasefire in Gaza through US, Qatari and Egyptian negotiators — though he and other Hamas officials always ran proposals and positions by Sinwar.

Speaking to Al-Jazeera television after the announcement, Hamas spokesman Osama Hamdan said Sinwar would continue the ceasefire negotiations.

“The problem in negotiations is not the change in Hamas,” he said, blaming Israel and its ally the United States for the failure to seal a deal.

But he said said Sinwar's selection was a sign the group's will had not been broken. Hamas “remains steadfast in the battlefield and in politics," he said. "The person leading today is the one who led the fighting for more than 305 days and is still steadfast in the field.”

Hamas' allies Iran and Hezbollah issued statements praising Sinwar's appointment.

Hamas' representative in Iran, Khaled Kaddoumi, called Sinwar a “consensus choice” popular among all factions and involved in the group’s decision-making throughout, including in negotiations. In a voice message to the AP, he said Sinwar knows the political aspirations of the Palestinians for a state and the return of refugees but he is also a “fierce fighter on the battlefield.”