Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

West Bank city’s restivenes­s grows

Israel says 3 knife attackers in Hebron shot dead in 2 days

- KARIN LAUB AND MOHAMMED DARAGHMEH Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Nasser Shiyoukhi, Josef Federman and Tia Goldenberg of The Associated Press.

HEBRON, West Bank — The West Bank’s largest city has become a focal point of Israeli-Palestinia­n violence, with near-daily deadly confrontat­ions erupting at Israeli army checkpoint­s that guard enclaves of Jewish settlers in the once-thriving center of Hebron.

One-third of 58 Palestinia­ns killed by Israeli fire since mid-September were in Hebron, including two Palestinia­ns shot dead Thursday. Eleven Israelis were killed in Palestinia­n attacks, mostly stabbings, over the same period, though none in Hebron.

Israel says nearly all of those killed in Hebron were knife-wielding attackers, but rights groups have challenged that, saying some did not pose a threat to soldiers’ lives.

The events in Hebron are central to the Israeli-Palestinia­n clash of narratives over the recent violence.

In a confrontat­ion Thursday, police said a 23-year-old Palestinia­n man stabbed a soldier in the head, wounding him lightly, and then attempted to stab another security officer before Israeli forces shot and killed him. The Palestinia­n approached soldiers at a checkpoint as clashes between Palestinia­n protesters and Israeli troops erupted nearby, police said.

Later Thursday, Israeli forces shot and killed another Palestinia­n who the military said attempted to stab an Israeli soldier. But

a Palestinia­n witness at the scene, community activist Issa Amro, challenged the Israeli account, saying he had not seen a knife. Palestinia­ns have repeatedly accused the army of using unnecessar­y or excessive force, a charge that Israel denies.

The Israeli military said Thursday that a Palestinia­n who tried to stab a soldier in the city on Wednesday died after forces shot him.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government portrays the spate of Palestinia­n attacks as a “wave of terror” whipped up by anti-Israeli Palestinia­n incitement.

Netanyahu’s critics say this ignores the underlying cause — nearly a half-century of Israeli military rule with no end in sight. Palestinia­ns “don’t grow up with knives in their hands,” said Hebron’s Yehuda Shaul, a peace activist and former Israeli combat soldier.

Israeli military occupation is felt in its rawest form in this city of 270,000 Palestinia­ns, whose downtown remains under exclusive Israeli control.

There, hundreds of troops guard 850 settlers, making it the only Palestinia­n population center in the West Bank with a major Israeli army presence.

“People are boiling — more settler violence, no hope,” said Palestinia­n activist Issa Amro.

Israeli settler spokesman Noam Arnon blames the violence on what he contends is the Palestinia­ns’ refusal to accept the presence of Jews and their historic roots in Hebron.

A small group of Palestinia­n attackers “wants to destroy the life of Jews and Arabs” in the city, he said. He dismissed allegation­s of systematic settler violence, portraying Palestinia­ns as the main aggressors.

Another ingredient in Hebron’s combustibl­e mix is a major shrine that was divided into separate prayer areas for Muslims and Jews in 1995, a year after a settler killed 29 Muslims in a shooting rampage there.

Known to Jews as the Tomb of the Patriarchs, it marks the traditiona­l burial sites of biblical patriarchs. Muslims call it the Ibrahimi Mosque, after Abraham, one of the patriarchs.

The latest violence began in Jerusalem, driven in part by Palestinia­n fears that Israel plans to divide a major contested shrine there like it did in Hebron. Israel denies such claims.

Initially, many of the attacks involved Palestinia­ns from Arab neighborho­ods of Jerusalem. After Israel erected roadblocks in Jerusalem earlier this month, restrictin­g the movement of Palestinia­ns, the momentum shifted to traditiona­lly volatile Hebron.

An interim agreement in the 1990s divided the city, placing the center under full Israeli control and the rest under Palestinia­n self-rule. The fate of the Hebron settlers was left to a final Israeli-Palestinia­n peace deal that never materializ­ed. Instead, settlers moved into more buildings and Israel tightened security controls, leading to the current separation regime.

About 10,000 Palestinia­ns live in the area closest to the settler enclaves that are guarded by 18 army checkpoint­s, said Amro, the Palestinia­n activist. Palestinia­ns can only use certain streets, while areas near settler compounds are off-limits, he said. Hundreds of small businesses and workshops in the area had to close because customers could no longer reach them.

Shaul, the former soldier and co-founder of Breaking The Silence, a group that collects testimony from army veterans about abuses by troops in the Palestinia­n territorie­s, said nothing justifies deadly Palestinia­n attacks, but that public debate in Israel lacks context.

“Anyone who does not understand that the word occupation needs to be at the beginning, middle and end of every sentence [about the current situation] is lying to himself and to the Israeli public,” he said.

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