Palestinian killed during settler assault on West Bank town

By Raneen Sawafta

HUWARA, West Bank (Reuters) -A Jewish settler killed a 19-year-old Palestinian during a settler attack on the occupied West Bank town of Huwara on Friday, the Palestinian Health Ministry said.

Residents said a group of settlers had erected a tent in Huwara, held prayers and later marched through the town. Some of them were carrying arms and began vandalising shops and cars, they said.

One of the settlers shot university student Labib Dumaidi, who later died of his wounds in hospital, the residents said.

The Israeli military, offering a different account, said its forces fired at a Palestinian who had hurled a brick at an Israeli vehicle during clashes between dozens of settlers and townspeople. It said the suspect was struck by gunfire but did not elaborate on his identity.

A military spokesperson said the military was unaware of any settler having fired a weapon during the confrontations.

Violence again erupted later on Friday when hundreds of people attended Dumaidi's funeral under the watch of Israeli soldiers.

The Palestinian Red Crescent said at least 51 Palestinians were wounded in clashes with the military during the funeral, mostly from tear gas and rubber-tipped bullets and three from live fire.

In testimony Israeli human rights group Yesh Din collected from Dumaidi's family, relatives said he had been shot in the chest while standing on the roof of their home trying to ward off settlers who were hurling rocks at the house and vandalising the family's car.

'HEINOUS CRIME'

The Palestinian Foreign Ministry condemned Dumaidi's killing as a "heinous crime" and called for international intervention to stop armed settler militias.

In a statement, UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process, Tor Wennesland, said he was "outraged by the continued incitement, provocations, and lack of accountability" for settler violence.

Residents said Israeli soldiers had turned a blind eye to the settler attacks at the time of Dumaidi's shooting.

"It's clear that the settler militias are protected by the occupation's soldiers," said Thaer Qawareeq, an employee at a supermarket damaged by the settlers, as his colleagues cleaned the pavement of glass shards. "This is the third time settlers shatter the supermarket's glass exterior."

Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who also holds some West Bank powers, said that Israel must take firmer action against Palestinian militants "to save lives and reinstate security."

He spoke on a visit to a site in Huwara where, on Thursday, a suspected Palestinian gunman shot at a car carrying three members of an Israeli family who were unharmed. Israeli security forces tracked the suspect down and killed him.

Smotrich added that he was committed to further developing Jewish settlements, which most countries deem as illegal.

The West Bank, among the territories where Palestinians seek statehood, has experienced a surge of violence in recent months amid expanding Jewish settlements and an almost decade-old impasse in U.S.-sponsored peacemaking.

In the first eight months of 2023, an average of three settler-related incidents occurred per day, the highest daily average of settler-related incidents affecting Palestinians since the United Nations started recording this data in 2006.

Huwara is surrounded by settlements that cut off Palestinians from each other and from their land.

Located on the main road connecting the northern city of Nablus to Ramallah and Jerusalem, the town has become the scene of repeated settler assaults on Palestinians, military restrictions and shooting attacks on Israelis.

(Additional reporting by Ali Sawafta, Nidal al-Mughrabi, Maayan Lubell and Henriette Chacar; Editing by Cynthia Osterman, Gareth Jones and Rod Nickel)