Anger as Palestinians bury prisoner, teens

Anger as Palestinians bury prisoner, teens

Clashes rocked the West Bank on Thursday as thousands attended the funerals of a prisoner and two teenagers shot dead by Israeli troops and Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas said the killings jeopardised US efforts to rekindle peace talks.

Relatives of Maisara Abu Hamdiya, a Palestinian prisoner who died of cancer while in Israeli detention, gather as his body is carried outside a mosque in the West Bank city of Hebron April 4, 2013. The West Bank simmered with anger Thursday as thousands joined the funeral of a prisoner who died in an Israeli jail and similar numbers gathered to bury two teens shot dead overnight.

Israeli soldiers fired rubber bullets in the southern city of Hebron after furious crowds lined the streets to pay their respects to 63-year-old Maisara Abu Hamdiyeh, whose body was carried in a cortege to a local mosque for burial.

Abu Hamdiyeh, who had served 10 years of a life term for attempted murder, died of throat cancer on Tuesday in hospital, sparking tension on the Palestinian street and its leadership accusing Israel of medical negligence.

As news of his death spread, protests that erupted in several places quickly turned into clashes with the Israeli army, notably in Hebron, Abu Hamdiyeh's home town.

Near the northern village of Anabta close to Tulkarem, the clashes turned deadly, with two teenagers shot dead overnight by troops, Israeli and Palestinian sources said.

Palestinian security officials said Amer Nasser, 17, was killed by a bullet to the head and Naji Balbisi, 19, whose body was discovered at dawn, was shot in the chest.

The Israeli military said troops had opened fire at "rioters who hurled petrol bombs" at a military post.

Abbas slammed the killings, saying in a statement that "the Israeli government is behind this escalation.

"The Israeli government is responsible for the (negative) impact on US and international efforts to restart negotiations."

He charged in a separate speech to his Fatah party that "Israel is trying to ignite chaos," adding that "there's no way peaceful demonstrations should lead to two deaths."

His remarks come just days ahead of a visit by US Secretary of State John Kerry, who will hold fortnightly meetings with Israeli and Palestinian leaders, local media say, as he tries to revive the stalled Middle East peace process.

In Anabta, where schools and shops were closed in mourning, around 6,000 people gathered for the funerals, many calling for revenge as the two bodies arrived, both wrapped in Palestinian flags, an AFP correspondent said.

Maath Kanaan spoke bitterly about the loss of his friend Amer.

"He always had a nationalist spirit and he was the first one to go to demonstrations. They killed him in cold blood," he said.

Since news of Abu Hamdiyeh's death emerged, Hebron has been wracked by clashes between stone-throwing youths and Israeli troops, and since Tuesday the city has been shut down for a three-day general strike in a show of mourning.

Soldiers on Thursday erected roadblocks in Hebron's old city and fired rubber bullets at protesters who set tyres alight.

On Wednesday, 4,600 prisoners in Israeli jails staged a one-day hunger strike, with another 1,900 refusing breakfast again on Thursday, the prisons service said.

Abu Hamdiyeh was jailed for life in 2002 on charges of attempted murder in connection with a failed bomb attack on a Jerusalem cafe. He had served 10 years of his sentence when he died.

The issue of Palestinians jailed by Israel is highly sensitive, and frequently sparks mass demonstrations across the territories that often flare into violent clashes with the military.

In the Gaza Strip, Salafist militants fired a handful of rockets over the border in protest on Tuesday and Wednesday, prompting retaliatory air strikes.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned that if a current truce in and around Gaza was violated, Israel would "respond forcefully."

In a separate development, Israel has reportedly deployed a fifth battery of its vaunted Iron Dome anti-missile system in the southern city of Eilat, over fears of rocket fire on the Red Sea resort.

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