Israeli forces pull out of Jenin leaving a trail of destruction
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[September 06, 2024]
By Ali Sawafta
JENIN (Reuters) -Israeli forces pulled out of the Palestinian city of
Jenin on Friday, leaving a mass of damaged buildings and infrastructure,
following one of the biggest security operations in the occupied West
Bank in months.
Road diggers began clearing piles of debris and rubble left by the
operation, which involved hundreds of troops and police backed by
helicopters and drones entering all areas of the city and the adjacent
refugee camp as well as surrounding villages.
Thousands of residents were displaced from their homes during the
nine-day operation, during which troops fought running gunbattles with
Palestinian fighters from factions including Hamas and Islamic Jihad and
Fatah.
"When they entered, they used bulldozers and began destroying
everything. They left nothing," said Jenin resident Samaher Abu Nassa.
Water and electricity services remain cut and around 20 km of roadway
was dug up by Israeli bulldozers, a tactic the military said was aimed
at neutralizing roadside bombs but which has ripped up much of the
centre of the city.
A statement from the military said 30 explosives planted under the roads
had been dismantled.
The Palestinian foreign ministry accused the military of transferring
the tactics used to level the Gaza Strip into the West Bank.
Jenin, in the northern part of the West Bank, has long been a stronghold
of Palestinian armed factions, and the Israeli military said the
operation, which also targeted the city of Tulkarm, was aimed at
thwarting Iranian-backed militant groups planning attacks on Israeli
civilians.
It said troops had killed 14 militant fighters during the operation,
including the local commander of Hamas in Jenin. Forces also arrested 30
suspects and confiscated weapons and dismantled infrastructure including
an underground weapons storage depot underneath a mosque and an
explosives workshop.
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Palestinians assess damage in the street following an Israeli
military operation in Jenin in the Israeli-occupied West Bank
September 6, 2024. REUTERS/Ali Sawafta
On Friday, thousands, including large numbers of armed men who fired
into the air, joined funeral processions for people killed during
the fighting. Many of the bodies were wrapped either in Palestinian
flags or the green, black and yellow flags of Hamas, Islamic Jihad
or Fatah.
In all 21 people were killed in Jenin during the operation. Many
were claimed as members by the armed factions but a number were
uninvolved civilians, including a 16-year-old girl, apparently shot
by a sniper while looking out of the window.
While the Israeli military's main focus over most of the past year
has been in Gaza, the West Bank has seen a surge in violence, with
repeated clashes between the military and Palestinian fighters as
well as raids by Jewish settlers on Palestinian villages and attacks
by Palestinians on Israelis.
More than 680 Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank and
East Jerusalem, according to Palestinian health ministry figures.
Many have been armed fighters but others have been youths throwing
stones at protests or civilians with no involvement in the violence.
In the same period, dozens of Israeli civilians have been killed in
attacks by Palestinians or in rocket and missile attacks from the
Iranian-backed Hezbollah in southern Lebanon.
(Additional reporting by Ahmed Tolba; Writing by James Mackenzie,
Editing by Kim Coghill and Philippa Fletcher)
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