Palestinian Tries to Ram Israel Soldiers In West Bank, Shot Dead

Israeli forces shot dead a Palestinian teenager who rammed a car into a military checkpoint in the occupied West Bank. (Getty Images)
Israeli forces shot dead a Palestinian teenager who rammed a car into a military checkpoint in the occupied West Bank. (Getty Images)
TT

Palestinian Tries to Ram Israel Soldiers In West Bank, Shot Dead

Israeli forces shot dead a Palestinian teenager who rammed a car into a military checkpoint in the occupied West Bank. (Getty Images)
Israeli forces shot dead a Palestinian teenager who rammed a car into a military checkpoint in the occupied West Bank. (Getty Images)

A Palestinian who tried to ram Israeli soldiers with his car in the Israeli-occupied West Bank late Tuesday was shot dead by the soldiers, the latest incident of violence over the past month.

The man crashed his car into a military jeep after being shot, causing both vehicles to burst into flames, a statement from Israel's military said of the incident near the northern West Bank city of Jenin.

The Palestinian health ministry later announced the death of a "citizen".

Since late November the West Bank has seen Palestinian attacks on Israelis and the killing of Palestinians by Israeli troops during clashes, prompting United Nations Middle East peace envoy Tor Wennesland on Friday to say he was "alarmed by the escalating violence" which has claimed the lives of Israelis and Palestinians.

In Tuesday's attack, the army said "a terrorist accelerated his car towards a manned military post adjacent to the community of Mevo Dotan" in the West Bank.

"Israeli troops who were at the point operated to stop the assailant by firing towards the vehicle," the statement said.

It then crashed "into a military vehicle that was in close proximity to the post. As a result, the vehicles caught on fire," it added.

An army spokesman told AFP the military believed the assailant had died as a result of gunshot wounds, but was unable to confirm this.

On Sunday the army said they had arrested four Palestinian men suspected of shooting dead a Jewish settler and wounding two others in an attack in the West Bank last Thursday.

The four are suspected of firing at least 10 bullets at a car, killing 25-year-old religious student Yehuda Dimentman and wounding two fellow students as they drove out of Homesh, an illegal outpost in the northern West Bank.

Israel captured the West Bank in 1967 from Jordan. Nearly 500,000 Israelis have moved into settlements in the territory, which much of the international community regards as illegal.

Dimentman, a married father, was studying at a religious school in Homesh, which had been evacuated by Israeli forces in 2005 but where settlers nevertheless continued to operate the yeshiva center.

A tense weekend followed.

On Saturday, Israeli border police arrested a 65-year-old Palestinian woman in Hebron after she allegedly stabbed and injured an Israeli settler.

On Friday, Jewish settlers raided the northern West Bank village of Burqah, near where Dimentman had been killed the night before.

An AFP reporter observed Israeli assailants hurling stones through the windows of homes and firing weapons.

Further south in the village of Qaryut, a Palestinian man was hospitalised after settlers assaulted him at home, the official Palestinian news agency Wafa reported. Israeli police said they were investigating the incident.



US Sanctions Group That Builds Illegal West Bank Settlements, with Close Ties to Israeli Govt

A general view of the West Bank Jewish settlement of Efrat ,Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2024. (AP)
A general view of the West Bank Jewish settlement of Efrat ,Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2024. (AP)
TT

US Sanctions Group That Builds Illegal West Bank Settlements, with Close Ties to Israeli Govt

A general view of the West Bank Jewish settlement of Efrat ,Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2024. (AP)
A general view of the West Bank Jewish settlement of Efrat ,Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2024. (AP)

The US has imposed sanctions on organizations and firms involved in illegal settlement development in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, including a decades-old group that has close ties with Israeli leadership.

US Treasury Department sanctioned Amana, the largest organization involved in illegal settlement development in the West Bank, and its subsidiary on Monday.

Already sanctioned by Britain and Canada, Amana is one of the major funders and supporters of unauthorized settlements in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

Peace Now, a settlement tracking group, says its assets are valued at around 600 million Israeli shekels, or about $160 million, and that it has a yearly budget stretching into tens of millions of shekels.

Among other things, the sanctions deny the people and firms access to any property or financial assets held in the US and prevent US companies and citizens from doing business with them.

The Associated Press previously reported that the sanctions measures have had minimal impact, instead emboldening settlers as attacks and land-grabs escalate, according to Palestinians in the West Bank, local rights groups and sanctioned Israelis who spoke to AP.

Israel captured the West Bank along with east Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip in the 1967 Mideast war. The Palestinians want those territories for their hoped-for future state.