More Palestinian martyrs in Tulkarem

The toll of Palestinian martyrs rises with two young people falling under the fire of the Zionist military in the occupied West Bank.

More Palestinian martyrs in Tulkarem

This was reported by military radio from Tel Aviv according to which today, Thursday 5 October, two Palestinian men were fatally shot at the entrance to the village of Shoufa in Tulkarem. This after the occupation army raided the refugee camp in the morning again in Tulkarem and clashed with young Palestinian fighters, defenders of the city.

Meanwhile, one of the military units of the Zionist regime fell into an ambush - always in the same area - set up by the resistance. The occupation forces immediately withdrew from the area, abandoning some of their equipment. According to local sources there were some wounded among the enemy unit.

The number of Palestinians who have lost their lives in the last 24 hours in various areas of the occupied West Bank at the hands of settlers who are supported by the police and the Zionist army in their daily violence against Palestinian civilians has risen to four. According to the Palestinian Ministry of Health, 19-year-old Labib Dumaidi died from injuries sustained in the early hours of Friday when he was shot in the heart by a Jewish extremist in the city of Huwara, south of Nablus.

This came as settlers, supported by the Israeli military, launched yet another provocative visit to Huwara on Thursday evening where they performed Talmudic rituals near the area where an alleged shooting attack on their vehicle allegedly occurred. 

The visit as expected triggered a reaction from the Palestinians with Israeli troops starting to fire live ammunition, tear gas and sound bombs at them. Dumaidi lost his life just hours after the Israeli army said its forces had killed another Palestinian during clashes that followed an alleged shooting attack that left a Jew injured. Last Thursday, the first two Palestinians Hudhayfah Fares and Abd al-Rahman Atta were killed during clashes with occupation troops.

B'Tselem