Monday, October 12, 2015

Pregnant Palestinian and child die in Israeli air raid

Israeli air raid kills two Palestinian
Israeli air raid kills two Palestinian



Noor Hassan, who was five-months pregnant, along with her three-year-old daughter, killed in air strike near Gaza City.

A Palestinian woman who was five-months pregnant and her three-year-old daughter have been killed in an Israeli air strike east of Gaza City.

Medical sources in the besieged territory said 30-year-old Noor Hassan and her daughter Rahaf died when their house collapsed following an Israeli air strike on a Hamas military training camp near their home.

Three other people were wounded in the attack on Sunday, and Palestinian rescue services are continuing to search under the rubble.

The Israeli army said the air strikes were launched in response to a rocket that was fired into southern Israel. The rocket was reportedly intercepted by Israel's Iron Dome rocket defence system.

The army said that its planes were targeting two Hamas weapons-manufacturing sites in the area.

After the deaths of the mother and child, Lieutenant Colonel Peter Lerner, an Israeli army spokesman, said: "The IDF [Israeli army] holds Hamas responsible for any act of aggression from the Gaza Strip."

Car 'explosive'

In a separate incident on Sunday, Israeli police said a Palestinian woman set off an explosive device in the occupied West Bank.

A policeman spotted her vehicle close to the Israeli settlement of Maale Adumim and ordered the 31-year-old woman to stop, police said.

She exited the car and the explosives inside detonated, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said, wounding her seriously and the officer lightly.

The woman, from Jericho in the West Bank, shouted "Allahu Akbar" (God is great) before the device went off. It was not clear whether she intended to carry out an attack at that location or elsewhere.

According to photos distributed by police, the explosives did not appear especially powerful, with the car still intact after the blast.

Teenagers killed

On Saturday, Israeli soldiers shot and killed two Palestinian teenagers in the Gaza Strip during confrontations, less than 24 hours after six people were shot dead while protesting along the border with Israel.

The Palestinian Health Ministry said 13-year-old Marwan Barbakh and 15-year-old Omar Othman were shot with live ammunition in eastern Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip.

Medical sources confirmed to Al Jazeera that at least 23 people had been injured in clashes with Israelis across Gaza on Saturday.

The ministry said in a post on FACEBOOK that the total number of Palestinians killed since the start of October now stood at 20, with nine killed in the Gaza Strip, and 11 in the occupied West Bank and occupied East Jerusalem.

The deaths of Noor Hassan and her daughter bring the death toll to 22.

On Friday, Israeli soldiers killed six Palestinians protesting along the border separating the territory from Israel.

Among those killed on Friday was a 15-year-old boy who was fatally shot at a demonstration in the al-Faraheen village, southeast of Gaza City.

The Israeli army claimed there had been "multiple violent attempts to storm the border fence" and "a thousand rioters infiltrated the buffer zone", throwing a "grenade, rocks and rolled burning tyres" at the soldiers".

East Jerusalem deaths

The deaths of the two teenagers in Gaza came shortly after three Palestinians were killed in separate incidents in East Jerusalem after reportedly attacking Israelis.


The dead included a 16-year-old who was shot dead by Israeli police after stabbing two men, and a member of Hamas who opened fire on Israeli paramilitary police during a clash in the Shuafat refugee camp.

Another Palestinian was shot dead after a stabbing attack against Israeli police officers. The incident left three Israeli police officers injured, one seriously after a possible "friendly fire" incident.

A Palestinian who was shot by Israeli forces in Hebron on Thursday succumbed to his injuries two days later.

The Palestinian Ministry of Health said two Palestinians were being treated for head injuries in Bethlehem after being hit by tear gas canisters fired by Israelis during protests there.

Al-Aqsa tensions

The recent violence has been fuelled by Palestinian fears that Israeli hardliners are trying to take control of the al-Aqsa Mosque compound in East Jerusalem, one of Islam's holiest sites.

Those fears have grown after visits by Jewish groups, including politicians, to the site.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has insisted Israel is committed to maintaining the status-quo and has banned his ministers from visiting the site.

Under the current arrangements, Jews are allowed to visit the site but non-Muslim prayer is banned.

Source :Aljazeera

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