Israeli forces kill Palestinian during West Bank raids

Palestinian mourners attend the funeral of Ahmad Massad, 21, in the village of Burqin, west of Jenin, Apr. 27, 2022. (AFP)
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Updated 27 April 2022
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Israeli forces kill Palestinian during West Bank raids

  • Ahmed Massad, 21, was shot in the head during violent clashes in Jenin, hospital authorities said
  • Three people were wounded and 16 arrested during the Israeli operations, which took place at dawn

RAMALLAH: Israeli forces killed a Palestinian man, wounded three and arrested 16 in the flashpoint West Bank city of Jenin on Wednesday.

A large number of Israeli troops carried out raids in the city and its refugee camp at dawn, with snipers deployed on rooftops. Violent clashes broke out between young men and the soldiers, who responded by firing live rounds, killing Ahmed Massad, 21.

Jani Abu Jokha, the director of Ibn Sina Hospital in Jenin, said Massad died of a bullet wound to the head, and that three other people were moderately wounded.

More than a thousand people gathered for Massad’s funeral in Burqin. Masked gunmen fired shots into the air as his body was taken from his family home. Mourners chanted slogans, vowing to continue the struggle against Israeli atrocities and calling for national unity and an end to divisions so that the Palestinian people can confront the terrorism and crimes of the occupying forces. They also denounced the silence of the international community about the killing and arrest of Palestinians.

Tariq Salmi, a spokesman for the Islamic Jihad Movement, said: “The ‘Jenin Brigade’ valiantly responded to the attempt to storm the Jenin camp. The unity and steadfastness of our people is an impenetrable wall and a guarantee to keep our cause alive through jihad and resistance.

“The arrest campaigns will not break the resolve of our people. It will neither discourage the resistance nor will it besiege it.”

Palestinian security sources said the Israeli army arrested three civilians at the Jenin camp after raiding and searching their homes. At the same time, Israeli forces raided several homes in the town of Qabatiya, south of Jenin, where they reportedly arrested three civilians and damaged property.

The sources said they expect Israeli operations against the Jenin refugee camp to escalate after Ramadan ends. It comes as Palestinians in the West Bank prepare to celebrate Lailat Al-Qadr, or The Night of Power, a special evening of prayer toward the end of Ramadan at mosques across the West Bank, and Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem in particular.

Al-Aqsa was the scene of violent confrontations between Muslim worshipers and Israeli police during the Hebrew feast of Passover that left hundreds of people injured. Israeli incursions at the site during Ramadan were condemned by Arab and regional authorities.

There have been heightened tensions between Palestinian youths and the Israeli police during Ramadan elsewhere in East Jerusalem, especially in the Damascus Gate area.

Meanwhile, the Israeli Temple Organizations Headquarters Authority called on Wednesday for the storming of Al-Aqsa Mosque on May 5, Israel’s independence day.


Syrian church marks Christmas and reaffirms faith months after deadly attack

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Syrian church marks Christmas and reaffirms faith months after deadly attack

DWEIL’A: At a church in Syria where a suicide attack killed 25 people in June, hundreds of worshippers gathered before Christmas to remember those they lost and reaffirm their faith.
With a small detail of security forces standing guard outside, members of Mar Elias Church held Mass on Tuesday evening and lit an image of Christmas tree made of neon lights on the wall of the courtyard outside. The tree was hung with pictures of those who were killed in the attack.
They include three men the congregation hails as heroes for tackling the bomber, potentially averting a much higher death toll in the June 22 attack.
A man opened fire then detonated an explosive vest inside the Greek Orthodox church in Dweil’a on the outskirts of Damascus as it was filled with people praying on a Sunday.
Before he detonated the vest, brothers Boutros and Gergis Bechara and another congregant, Milad Haddad, tackled the shooter and pushed him out of the center of the church, congregants said.
“If it weren’t for the three of them, maybe not one person would remain out of 400 people,” said Imad Haddad, the brother of Milad Haddad, who attended Tuesday’s Christmas tree lighting.
He hasn’t decorated for Christmas or put up a tree at home, but gathering at the church was “is a message of peace and love” and a message that “we are believers and we are strong and we are steadfast in spite of everything,” he said.
Thana Al-Masoud, the widow of Boutros Bechara, recalled searching frantically for her husband after the explosion but she never found him, alive or dead. His body had been ripped apart by the blast.
“There’s no holiday, neither this year nor next year nor the one after it,” she said.
She takes comfort in the belief that her husband and the two other men who confronted the attacker are martyrs for their faith.
“Our Lord chose them to be saints and to spread His word to all the world,” she said. “But the separation is difficult.”
Attack stoked Christian fears
The attack on the church was the first of its kind in Syria in years and came as a new Sunni Islamist- dominated government in Damascus sought to win the confidence of religious minorities following the ouster of former President Bashar Assad.
Interim President Ahmad Al-Sharaa has struggled to exert authority across the country, even in the ranks of allied groups. There have been several deadly outbreaks of sectarian violence in the country in the past year.
While the new government has condemned attacks on minorities, many accuse it of failing to act to control the armed factions it is trying to absorb into the new state army and security forces.
The June attack was blamed on a Daesh cell, which authorities said had also planned to target a Shiite shrine. IS did not claim responsibility for the attack, while a little-known group called Saraya Ansar Al-Sunna said one of its members had carried out the attack. The government said the group was a cover for IS.
Christians made up about 10 percent of Syria’s population of 23 million before mass anti-government protests in 2011 were met by a brutal government crackdown and spiraled into a brutal 14-year civil war that saw the rise of IS and other extremist groups.
Hundreds of thousands of Christians fled during the war, during which there were sectarian attacks on Christians including the kidnapping of nuns and priests and destruction of churches. Now many are once again seeking to leave.
Solidifying faith and seeking peace
Since losing her husband in the church attack, Juliette Alkashi feels numb.
The couple had been sweethearts before she left Syria with her mother and brother to emigrate to Venezuela. In 2018, when Emile Bechara asked her to marry him, Alkashi moved back to Syria even though it was still in the midst of a civil war.
“Whatever is going to happen will happen, and I’ve surrendered to it,” she said. “If one goes to pray and dies in the church — whatever God has written is what will be.”
The only thing that matters now, Alkashi said, is that she and her 3-year-old son remain together.
Some congregants said the attack only strengthened their faith.
“I saw a column of smoke rising from the ground to the ceiling, and I heard a voice saying, ‘I will not forsake you and I will not leave you,’” said Hadi Kindarji, who described an intense spiritual experience in the moment of the explosion.
He believes today that even the seemingly senseless violence was part of God’s plan.
“Our God is present, and He was present in the church,” he said.
Yohanna Shehadeh, the priest of Mar Elias church, acknowledged many in the congregation are afraid of more deadly violence.
“Fear is a natural state. I’m not going to tell you there is no fear, and I’m not only talking about the Christians but about all the Syrian people, from all sects,” Shehadeh said.
As Christmas approaches, he said, they are praying for peace.