Two Palestinians killed in Israel army raid in West Bank 

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A Palestinian throws a tire onto a fire, creating a roadblock, during a raid by Israeli soldiers in the city of Nablus in the occupied West Bank on April 3, 2023. (AFP)
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An Israeli soldier fires a projectile during clashes in the city of Nablus in the occupied West Bank, following a raid by Israeli forces. (AFP)
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Updated 03 April 2023
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Two Palestinians killed in Israel army raid in West Bank 

  • Palestinian medical sources confirmed that the army killed Mohammed Al-Hallaq and Mohammed Abu Baker during the incursion, which lasted a few hours
  • The latest deaths bring the number of Palestinians killed by the Israeli military since the beginning of this year to 93

RAMALLAH: There was widespread condemnation on Monday as two Palestinian men were killed by Israeli troops in an army raid in the occupied West Bank city of Nablus. 

Palestinian factions and the governor of Nablus announced a strike in the city to protest the killings.

In Nablus, the Israeli army also arrested two others and injured 55 other citizens with tear gas during its military incursion into the city as violence and tension escalated in the occupied territories.

Palestinian medical sources confirmed that the army killed Mohammed Al-Hallaq and Mohammed Abu Baker during the incursion, which lasted a few hours.

The latest deaths bring the number of Palestinians killed by the Israeli military since the beginning of this year to 93. At least three of them were killed during Ramadan.

Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammed Shtayyeh condemned the killings.

“The killings and crimes committed by the occupation soldiers and settlers do not stop,” he said, adding that they are part of a “systematic policy embraced” by the occupation.

Nabil Abu Rudeineh, spokesman for the Palestinian presidency, said that the Israeli authorities’ continuation of settlement expansions, killings, and incursions into the Al-Aqsa Mosque confirm that they are striving to escalate tensions and drag the region into a cycle of violence.

Meanwhile, with the approach of the Jewish Passover on Wednesday, Israeli extremists have vowed to slaughter their offerings inside Al-Aqsa Mosque.

Far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir called on his supporters to storm Al-Aqsa Mosque in large numbers on Wednesday.

On Monday, 103 settlers stormed the mosque under protection from the Israeli police and performed Talmudic rituals near the Bab Al-Rahma area and in front of the Dome of the Rock.

The Temple Mount Movement groups continued to mobilize their supporters in an attempt to slaughter Jewish Passover offerings inside Al-Aqsa Mosque.

Rudeineh warned against the continuation of settler incursions into Al-Aqsa Mosque and attacks on worshippers.

He stressed that these attacks constitute a dangerous escalation and said that Israeli authorities would be held responsible for these continuous attacks on the Palestinian people.

The spokesman called on the international community — especially the US administration — to intervene and place pressure on the Israeli government to stop its crimes against the Palestinian people before the situation worsened.

Shtayyeh also condemned the settlers’ continued incursions into Al-Aqsa Mosque, their calls to slaughter sacrifices in its courtyards, and the arrests of Muslim worshipers in the mosque during Ramadan.

During a government session on Monday in Ramallah, the prime minister said that Israeli authorities were pushing worshipers away from Al-Aqsa using intimidation and restrictions on the passage of people through checkpoints and gates.

Hatem Al-Bakri, minister of religious affairs for the Palestinian Authority, described the measures taken by the Israeli occupation authorities against Al-Aqsa Mosque and worshipers during Ramadan as perilous.

“The Israeli government is planning to enable extremist settlers to slaughter sacrifices inside Al-Aqsa Mosque. The continued settler incursions and Israeli police attacks on worshipers will drag the region into a hazardous situation,” Al-Bakri told Arab News.

The minister said that Israel was seeking to deter Muslims from worshipping at the mosque but added that Palestinians would never accept this.

Al-Bakri said that the Israeli occupation stormed Al-Aqsa 25 times last month.

Khaled al-Kurdi, a journalist from the Old City of Jerusalem who lives near the gates of Al-Aqsa Mosque, told Arab News that he did not expect Israeli security services to allow Ben-Gvir’s followers to slaughter sacrifices inside Al-Aqsa. The move would lead to an unprecedented escalation and, possibly, a religious war, which would cause diplomatic embarrassment and further deteriorate Israel’s relationship with Jordan and other Arab countries.

Suhail Diab, mayor of Tamra in Galilee, told Arab News: “This government seeks to create problems instead of solving them. It seeks to complicate the situation to serve its interests and strengthen Israel’s right wing.”

Palestinians are also concerned about the formation of a national guard under the supervision of the far-right national security minister as, rather than an ordinary police force, it would constitute a military force to counter Palestinian demonstrations in Israel.  

Diab told Arab News that “the national guard formed by Ben-Gvir is a criminal gang to serve him and (Finance Minister Bezalel) Smotrich and (Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu.

“We reject their interference in Arab society (in Israel).”

The mayor added that Arab local authorities have decided not to receive Ben-Gvir and Smotrich in their towns in Galilee, the Triangle and Negev because of their attitudes toward Arabs and their incitements against them.

The Palestinian Wall and Settlement Resistance Commission said in its monthly report that Israeli occupation authorities and settlers carried out 436 attacks during March. 

These included direct assaults on citizens, vandalism, land leveling, tree uprooting and property seizures.


Trump: US carrying out ‘major combat operations’ in Iran

Updated 5 min 41 sec ago
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Trump: US carrying out ‘major combat operations’ in Iran

  • An Israeli defense official said the operation had been planned for months in coordination with Washington

WASHINGTON/DUBAI/CAIRO: US President Donald Trump said ​on Saturday that the United States had begun “major combat operations” in Iran, warning that there may be US casualties.

The strikes, which Trump said were aimed at destroying Iranian missiles and annihilating its navy, follow repeated US-Israeli warnings that ‌they would ‌strike Iran again ​if ‌it pressed ⁠ahead ​with its ⁠nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

“I do not make this statement lightly. The Iranian regime seeks to kill,” Trump said in a video shared on Truth Social.

“The lives of courageous American ⁠heroes may be lost and ‌we may have casualties ‌that often happens in ​war, but we’re ‌doing this, not for now. We’re ‌doing this for the future, and it is a noble mission.”

 

 

Trump told the members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard, Iran’s armed forces, ‌to lay down their weapons, promising that they would be granted ⁠immunity.

The ⁠other option, according to Trump, is “certain death.”

Washington and Tehran held a series of talks in recent weeks about Iran’s nuclear ambition. The most recent one was held on Thursday with no deal.

“Iran refused, just as it has for decades and decades. They rejected every opportunity to renounce their ​nuclear ambitions, and we ​can’t take it anymore,” Trump said.Israel launched a pre-emptive attack against Iran on Saturday, and ​a United States attack is underway, plunging the Middle East into a renewed military confrontation and further dimming hopes for a diplomatic solution to Tehran’s nuclear dispute with the West.

The latest updates:

• Israeli military reports missiles have been launched from Iran toward Israel, authorities call on people to head to shelters

• Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian is “safe and sound”, state media reported.

• The Jerusalem municipality ordered schools and workplaces to close on Saturday after Israel launched strikes on arch-foe Iran

• US embassies in Qatar, Bahrain issue shelter-in-place orders for personnel

• Tasnim reports Iran is preparing for strong response to Israel

• Israeli media: We are awaiting confirmation of the assassination of a number of prominent Iranian leaders

• Iranian television has declared a state of alert in all hospitals across the country

• Israeli media said that Israel was targeting rocket launch sites to prevent Iran from responding

• The head of Iran’s National Security Committee said that Israel has embarked on a path whose outcome is not in its hands

• Explosions heard in the cities of Qom, Karaj and Kermanshah

• Explosions heard in Isfahan, central Iran

• Israeli Army Radio said air force launches second wave of strikes on Iran

The scope of the air and sea operations was not immediately clear. Iran was preparing a crushing retaliation, an Iranian official said.

An apparent strike in Iran’s capital Saturday happened near the offices of Khamenei. State television acknowledged an explosion in the area of the offices.

Israeli media reported attempts to assassinate Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian during the attacks, and have not ruled out Khamenei being targeted.

Several missiles have struck University Street and the Jomhouri area in Tehran, while explosion likely occurred in the northern Seyyed Khandan area of Tehran, state media reported. Thick smoke was also rising from the vicinity of Pasteur Street in downtown Tehran, ISNA said.

The attack, coming after Israel and Iran engaged in a 12-day air war in June, follows repeated US-Israeli warnings that they would strike again if ‌Iran pressed ‌ahead with its nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

“The State ​of ‌Israel ⁠launched ​a pre-emptive ⁠attack against Iran to remove threats to the State of Israel,” Defense Minister Israel Katz said.

People watch as smoke rises on the skyline after an explosion in Tehran on Feb. 28, 2026. (AP)

An Israeli defense official said the operation had been planned for months in coordination with Washington, and that the launch date was decided weeks ago.

The US military declined to immediately comment on the attack.

Explosions were heard in Tehran on Saturday, Iranian media reported, and sirens sounded across Israel around 08:15 local time in what the military said was a proactive ⁠alert to prepare the public for the possibility of an ‌incoming missile strike.

The Israeli military announced ‌the closure of schools and workplaces, with exceptions for ​essential sectors, and a ban on public ‌airspace.

Israel closed its airspace to civilian flights, and the airports authority ‌asked the public not to go to any of the country’s airports.

The country’s airspace will reopen and flights to and from Israel to resume ‘as soon as the security situation allows,’ the airport authority said.

Iran’s airspace has been closed, Tasnim news agency reported.

People run for cover following an explosion in Tehran on Feb. 28, 2026. (WANA via Reuters)

The US and Iran renewed negotiations in February in a bid to resolve the decades-long dispute through diplomacy and avert the threat of a military confrontation that could destabilize the region.

Israel, however, ‌insisted that any US deal with Iran must include the dismantling of Tehran’s nuclear infrastructure, not just stopping the ⁠enrichment process, and ⁠lobbied Washington to include restrictions on Iran’s missile program in the talks.

Iran said it was prepared to discuss curbs on its nuclear program in exchange for lifting sanctions but ruled out linking the issue to missiles.

Tehran also said it would defend itself against any attack.

It warned neighboring countries hosting US troops that it would retaliate against American bases if Washington struck Iran.

In June, the US joined an Israeli military campaign against Iranian nuclear installations, in the most direct American military action ever against the Islamic Republic.

Tehran retaliated then by launching missiles toward the US Al Udeid air base in Qatar, ​the largest in the Middle ​East.

Western powers have warned that Iran’s ballistic missile project threatens regional stability and could deliver nuclear weapons if developed. Tehran denies seeking atomic bombs.