A Bethlehem hospital
said a 13-year-old boy identified as Abdel-Rahman Abeidallah of the nearby
al-Aidah refugee camp died of a bullet wound to the heart.
The Israeli military
said it had no specific information. Recent bloodshed has included a drive-by
shooting that killed an Israeli couple in the West Bank on Thursday and an
arson attack that killed a Palestinian toddler and his parents in July.
Israel said it had
arrested five men from the West Bank city of Nablus on suspicion of carrying
out Thursday’s drive-by shooting.
Other incidents
involving Palestinian stone-throwers and Israeli security forces continued
without respite on Monday. The Red Crescent ambulance service said some 170
Palestinians were injured.
Late on Monday, Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convened his security cabinet, a close circle of
ministers, to authorize the harsher measures to tackle the rising violence in
East Jerusalem, which includes the walled Old City, and the West Bank, areas
that Israel captured in a 1967 war.
In broadcast remarks
before the meeting, Netanyahu said Israel would respond strongly “against
terrorism and against inciters”. He said four more army battalions had been
deployed in the West Bank and thousands of police had been stationed in
Jerusalem.
“The police are going
deeply into the Arab neighbourhoods, which has not been done in the past. We
will demolish terrorists’ homes. We are allowing our forces to take strong
action against those who throw rocks and fire bombs,” he said.
But settlers and
right-wingers were unimpressed and thousands protested near Netanyahu’s
official residence in Jerusalem to decry the government’s “lack of resolve” in
fighting Palestinian attacks and ensuring their safety.
In Gaza, Sami Abu Zuhri,
the spokesman for Islamist Hamas, which runs the coastal enclave said Israel’s
harsher measures would not manage “to switch off the protests”.
Tensions have been
inflamed in particular by frequent clashes between Palestinian stone-throwers
and Israeli security forces at Jerusalem’s al-Aqsa mosque compound.
Palestinians have said
they fear increasing visits by Jewish groups to al-Aqsa, revered by Jews as the
site of biblical temples, are eroding Muslim religious control there. U.S. Secretary
of State John Kerry called for calm, saying it was “unacceptable on either side
to have violence resorted to as a solution. ... That kind of violence is not
going to serve anybody’s purpose,” he told reporters during a visit to Chile.
Israeli-Palestinian peace talks collapsed in April 2014.
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