Arab News

Israel in West Bank manhunt as Netanyahu under pressure

- AFP Ramallah

Israeli forces kept up a manhunt on Friday for a Palestinia­n who shot dead two soldiers in the occupied West Bank, as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faced rightwing pressure for a strong response.

Thursday’s shooting was the latest incident shattering months of relative calm in the West Bank, where 400,000 Israelis live in settlement­s alongside more than 2.5 million Palestinia­ns.

It was the third deadly attack by Palestinia­n gunmen in the West Bank in two months and set off demonstrat­ions by settler groups against Netanyahu, whose right-wing government depends on their support.

Israeli media speculated on Friday about the possibilit­y of a new Palestinia­n “intifada,” or uprising, against Israel’s occupation of the West Bank.

In Thursday’s attack, a gunman got out of his car and opened fire on soldiers and others outside a settlement in the central West Bank, killing two and seriously injuring another two Israelis before fleeing.

In response the army locked down the city of Ramallah, home to secular Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas, while calling in reinforcem­ents.

Clashes between Palestinia­ns and Israeli forces erupted in different parts of the West Bank, including inside Ramallah during army raids.

Settlers shouting for revenge threw stones at Palestinia­n vehicles, while an Arab bus driver was beaten by ultra- Orthodox Jews in the Modiin Illit settlement, and are seen as one of the greatest obstacles to peace, though Israel disputes this. Hamas, for its part, has controlled the Gaza Strip since seizing it from Abbas’ forces in 2007.

While Abbas’ Palestinia­n Authority has limited self-rule in parts of the West Bank, Hamas cells still operate in the territory.

On Thursday, Hamas claimed responsibi­lity for two shooting attacks that killed three Israelis, including a baby. Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh said on Thursday that the West Bank had “opened a new page” in the movement’s conflict with the Jewish state.

Netanyahu’s coalition government, which has only a one-seat majority in Parliament, relies on the support of pro-settler parties.

Right-wing protesters in Jerusalem late on Thursday booed Netanyahu, while an MP from the far-right Jewish Home urged him to close all West Bank roads to Palestinia­ns or have “blood on his hands.”

Hugh Lovatt, an analyst at the European Council on Foreign Relations, said the situation was reminiscen­t to the buildup to the 2014 Gaza war.

“What adds further danger is that we are heading into elections in Israel in 2019, so Netanyahu will have to take a more forceful hand,” Lovatt told AFP.

“He has long run on his security credential­s, saying he keeps Israel safe, and his only real challenge comes from the right.”

Netanyahu, whose Likud bloc heads the government, responded on Thursday by announcing new measures to support settlement­s, but Yediot Aharonot newspaper said he would need to respond forcefully.

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