Assassination of Fatah Official Raises Fear of Chaos in West Bank

Palestinian police officers in Bethlehem in the West Bank stand guard outside the Church of the Nativity that was closed as a preventive measure against the coronavirus (Reuters)
Palestinian police officers in Bethlehem in the West Bank stand guard outside the Church of the Nativity that was closed as a preventive measure against the coronavirus (Reuters)
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Assassination of Fatah Official Raises Fear of Chaos in West Bank

Palestinian police officers in Bethlehem in the West Bank stand guard outside the Church of the Nativity that was closed as a preventive measure against the coronavirus (Reuters)
Palestinian police officers in Bethlehem in the West Bank stand guard outside the Church of the Nativity that was closed as a preventive measure against the coronavirus (Reuters)

A senior Fatah official was shot dead in the West Bank on Saturday during a confrontation with Palestinian Authority (PA) security forces, which raised concerns about security in the area.

Fatah member, Emadeddine Abu al-Ameed Dweikat, 54, was fatally shot in al-Balata suburb of Nablus, by security officers when they were trying to close stores and arrest their owners for not adhering to precautionary measures during the coronavirus pandemic.

Clashes erupted and authorities tried to arrest a store owner, when Dweikat intervened saying he allowed the shops to open for two hours per day within his capacity as Fatah’s official in the neighborhood. Then, a security officer opened fire, killing Dweikat and injuring another young man.

The incident soon turned into angry protests within Fatah areas, and protesters threw stones at the security forces and blocked roads in a tense situation.

The incident brought back to mind similar confrontations in Dheisha camp in Bethlehem between angry citizens and the security forces.

Also, the West Bank witnessed clashes between security forces and protesters denouncing the economic policies pursued within the emergency plan announced during the coronavirus pandemic.

The authority was accused of suppressing freedoms, arresting activists, and pursuing others, as rights groups and centers have denounced the use of excessive force.

The Popular Front, a major faction in the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO), called on the PA security forces to enforce discipline among its members and “respect the law, dignity, and rights of our people.”

It urged authorities to establish more feasible measures to confront COVID-19 disease, noting that the current measures were not fair for the poor.

Meanwhile, Hemaya Center for Human Rights also condemned the use of excessive force by the authority, which constitutes a violation of the United Nations Code of Conduct for Law Enforcement Officials, stating in its third article that: “Law enforcement officials may use force only when strictly necessary and to the extent required for the performance of their duty.”

The Center called for an immediate, independent, and serious investigation into the killing of Dweikat, noting that the results must be publicly published in order to achieve justice.

The Governor of Nablus, Major General Ibrahim Ramadan, announced the formation of an investigative committee to probe Dweikat’s death.

“There is a necessity for everyone to exercise a sense of responsibility, and we will stand upon our own responsibilities to immediately investigate these events, based on instructions from the His Excellency the President and the Prime Minister,” Ramadan said in a press statement.



Lebanon Receives First UN Aid Plane since Israel's War

Staff unload a medical aid shipment at the Beirut International Airport - AFP
Staff unload a medical aid shipment at the Beirut International Airport - AFP
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Lebanon Receives First UN Aid Plane since Israel's War

Staff unload a medical aid shipment at the Beirut International Airport - AFP
Staff unload a medical aid shipment at the Beirut International Airport - AFP

A delivery of medical supplies from the United Nations reached Lebanon on Friday, a first since last week's Israeli war on Lebanon, said a UN agency and a Lebanese minister.

"An airlift... landed in Beirut earlier this morning with 30 metric tonnes of trauma and surgical supplies, enough to treat tens of thousands people," the World Health Organization's regional director Hanan Balkhy said on social media platform X.

"More flights are arriving later today and tomorrow, carrying trauma supplies, cholera supplies and mental health supplies," she added, AFP reported.

Rapidly escalating Israeli strikes since September 23 on Lebanon have killed more than 1,100 people in and wounded hundreds more, according to an AFP tally of official figures.

Lebanese authorities said the violence has also displaced more than one million people from their homes in the tiny Mediterranean country, already mired in economic and political crises.

Health Minister Firass Abiad was at the Beirut airport on Friday to receive the aid organized by the World Health Organization and UN refugee agency UNHCR and funded by the United Arab Emirates.

"We are receiving the first shipment out of many," he said.

The shipment included "many trauma kits that will be crucial to support the hospitals as they receive the casualties from the Israeli attacks on Lebanon," he added.