West Bank violence burns as Israeli election nears
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[October 11, 2022]
By Ali Sawafta and James Mackenzie
NABLUS, West Bank (Reuters) - In the
alleyways of the Old City of Nablus, posters commemorating young men
killed in clashes with Israeli forces are everywhere, an unavoidable
reminder of the escalating violence in the occupied West Bank over
recent months.
After years of relative calm, more than 100 Palestinians from the West
Bank have been killed this year, most since late March during a
crackdown following a string of fatal street attacks by Palestinians in
Israel which killed 19 people.
Just last weekend, four Palestinian teenagers and an 18-year-old Israeli
soldier were killed in separate incidents.
"The situation in the West Bank is worse than it has been for many
years," said Ibrahim Ramadan, the Palestinian Authority governor of
Nablus, who said there was a complete breakdown of trust on the part of
young men radicalised by daily confrontations with troops and Israeli
settlers.
"Nowadays, no one can control the militants in the street."
With an election on Nov. 1, Prime Minister Yair Lapid has backed a
two-state solution with an independent Palestinian state alongside
Israel, which seized control of the West Bank in the 1967 Middle Eastern
war.
But with the relentless expansion of Israeli settlements into areas at
the heart of any future state, faith in a political solution has rarely
seemed more distant among Palestinians in the sprawling refugee camps of
cities like Nablus or Jenin.
"This generation cannot see a political horizon," said Alaa Al-Nabulsi,
whose 18-year-old son Ibrahim Al-Nabulsi was killed in a gun fight with
Israeli forces in the Old City on Aug. 9. and whose name has become a
rallying cry.
For most Israeli voters, focused mainly on the soaring cost of living,
surveys show the Palestinian issue barely registers as an election
issue, while among settlers in the West Bank, there are calls for a
tougher crackdown.
"We are in the midst of a wave of terror courtesy of the terrorist
Palestinian Authority," Yossi Dagan, head of Samaria Regional Council,
said at a protest on Sunday after a car was fired on at a settlement
near Nablus.
"This morning it was in Samaria and tomorrow it will be everywhere in
Israel," he said, using a Biblical name sometimes used by Israelis for
an area of the West Bank.
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A Palestinian militant takes part in a
protest following a clash between Palestinian gunmen and Israeli
army, in Kafr Dan village near Jenin in the Israeli-occupied West
Bank September 14, 2022. REUTERS/Raneen Sawafta
Israeli officials blame the PA, which exercises limited rule in the
West Bank, for failing to control factions like the Iran-linked
Islamic Jihad movement, target of 56-hour Israeli air strikes into
Gaza in August.
The PA, deeply unpopular in the West Bank and under pressure from
the more radical Hamas, says its hands are tied by Israel and it
cannot prevent violence against Palestinians by settlers who enjoy
army protection.
NO POLITICAL HORIZON
Many of the fighters whose portraits plaster the Old City and the
refugee camps in any case had little connection with established
factions and instead belonged to loose groups with names like the
"Den of Lions", with little clear agenda beyond hostility to the
Israeli occupation.
For the moment, given divisions in the Palestinian leadership, few
expect a repeat of the two Intifadas, or revolts, of the 1980s and
early 2000s, which entrenched the deep divide between Israel and the
Palestinians.
"There isn't the infrastructure for resistance," said one veteran
official of the mainstream Fatah party, who spent years in an
Israeli jail. "In the First Intifada, there were universities, the
unions, society was ready for it."
The growing violence has raised international alarm, including from
the United States, Israel's closest ally. But there is little sign
of change from the main Israeli parties' positions on the
Palestinian issue ahead of the election.
With no sign of a wider political solution to the conflict, the
official focus is control, summed up in the expression used to
describe the army's approach: "mowing the grass".
"Anyone who wants to carry out shooting attacks and kill Israeli
civilians is in our crosshairs," Defence Minister Benny Gantz said
last week.
(Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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