Two days of Israeli raids kill at least 16 Palestinians in West Bank

Smoke billows following an Israeli airstrike in the southern Lebanese village of Adaisseh near the border with Israel on August 28, 2024. (Photo by Rabih DAHER / AFP)
Israel on Thursday pressed a large-scale military operation in
the occupied West Bank, leaving at least 16 Palestinians dead in two days
despite UN concerns it was "fuelling an already explosive situation".
The "counter-terrorism" operation underway across
the northern West Bank since early Wednesday has killed 16 Palestinians, the
Israeli military said. The Palestinian health ministry gave the same figure,
after both revised earlier tolls.
The raids on several towns and refugee camps were launched as
violence raged on in the war-battered Gaza Strip, the besieged Palestinian
territory separated from the West Bank by Israel.
In the West Bank, columns of Israeli armoured vehicles backed
by troops and aircraft were sent in before soldiers encircled refugee camps in
Tubas and Tulkarem, as well as Jenin, and exchanged fire with Palestinian
militants.
The army said it killed seven militants on Thursday, including
five militants in the Tulkarem refugee camp.
A military statement said one of the five was Muhammad Jaber,
also known as Abu Shujaa, who Palestinian militant group Islamic Jihad said was
its commander in the nearby Nur Shams refugee camp.
Two other militants were killed in Jenin on Thursday, the army
said.
The violence has caused significant destruction, especially in
Tulkarem, whose governor Mustafa Taqatqa described the raids as
"unprecedented" and a "dangerous signal".
The UN humanitarian office OCHA said "Israeli forces have
repurposed homes as military positions" and were "effectively
besieging" several medical facilities.
United Nations chief Antonio Guterres called for an
"immediate cessation of these operations", condemning in a statement
the use of air strikes and "the loss of lives, including of
children".
"These dangerous developments are fuelling an already
explosive situation in the occupied West Bank," Guterres said.
AFPTV footage showed bulldozers ripping up the asphalt from
streets in the city. Widespread damage was reported to infrastructure.
Witnesses said the Israeli forces had withdrawn from Al-Farra
refugee camp in Tubas where several Palestinians were killed on Wednesday,
including two teenagers according to the Palestinian Red Crescent.
AFP correspondents said clashes were ongoing in Jenin, where a
drone was seen flying overhead and the streets were empty, and Israeli soldiers
were operating in Tulkarem.
The Palestinian Prisoners' Club advocacy group said at least
45 people had been detained in the West Bank since Wednesday. An Israeli
military spokesman said "10 wanted individuals were arrested".
Jordan's King Abdullah II appealed for a ceasefire in Gaza to
stop the spread of violence and Iran's foreign ministry condemned the Israeli
operation as a "continuation of the genocide in the Gaza Strip".
The United Nations on Wednesday said at least 637 Palestinians
had been killed in the West Bank by Israeli troops or settlers since the Gaza
war erupted on October 7.
Nineteen Israelis, including soldiers, have been killed in
Palestinian attacks or during army operations over the same period, according
to Israeli official figures.
In Gaza, the Israeli military said it had "eliminated
dozens" of militants in a day of combat and strikes.
The civil defence agency in the Hamas-ruled territory said
Israeli shelling killed five displaced Palestinians in a tent east of Khan
Yunis, southern Gaza's main city.
Hamas's October 7 attack on Israel, which triggered the Gaza
war, resulted in the deaths of 1,199 people, mostly civilians, according to an
AFP tally based on Israeli official figures.
Israel's retaliatory military campaign has killed at least
40,602 people in Gaza, according to the territory's health ministry. The UN
rights office says most of the dead are women and children.
The war has devastated Gaza, repeatedly displaced most of its
2.4 million people and triggered a humanitarian crisis.
As emergency services crumble under the strain of the war,
Gaza's civil defence agency said ambulance and fire services had been severely
degraded, with most "hit by Israeli strikes".
The World Health Organization said Israel had agreed to at
least three days of "humanitarian pauses" in parts of Gaza, starting
September 1, to facilitate a vaccination drive after the first case of
once-eradicated polio had been confirmed in the territory.
Palestinians militants on October 7 also seized 251 hostages,
103 of whom are still captive in Gaza including 33 the Israeli military says
are dead.
Increasingly desperate families of the hostages gathered at
the border with Gaza on Thursday to deliver symbolic messages to their loved
ones.
Rachel Goldberg-Polin, the mother of the hostage Hersh
Goldberg-Polin, yelled into a microphone: "I love you, stay strong,
survive."
She told AFP that the war had "gone on way too long"
and there was "suffering on all sides... it has to stop".
In central Gaza, some Palestinians returned to parts of Deir
el-Balah after the military had amended a previous evacuation order.
Mohamed Abu Thuria told AFP he had "found massive
destruction everywhere".
Another displaced Gazans back in Deir al-Balah, Ibrahim
al-Tabaan, said: "We lost everything."
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