Seven Palestinian resistance fighters, among them three senior
leaders, have been killed in the West Bank city of Nablus,
witnesses said.
The Israeli occupation force had no immediate comment.
Palestinian medics, who checked the bodies, said on Saturday that
they were riddled with bullets.
Aljazeera's
correspondent in Ram Allah said six of them were killed when
Israeli forces encircled a group of al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigade
fighters in a tunnel. Another brigade
fighter was killed elsewhere in the city.
Among those killed was Nayif Abu Sharkh, appointed two months
ago as the West Bank leader of the brigades. The group is a
part of Palestinian President Yasir Arafat's Fatah faction.
The
local leader of the military wing of Hamas in Nablus and the top
commander of Islamic Jihad in the West Bank city of Jenin, who has
been in Nablus for the past two years, were also among the dead.
Searches
Earlier on Saturday, the Israeli forces carried out
house-to-house searches in the old quarter for the third consecutive
day.
The troops also intercepted the funeral procession of
two Palestinian youths shot dead by occupation soldiers the previous
day, and took away some men from among the
group.
The searches and detentions were part of a larger Israeli
army operation in the vicinity of the cemetery, ostensibly to
apprehend Palestinian activists on Israel's wanted
list.
Ihab Mahir Salim, 19, was killed and his father and two
brothers wounded when, according to eye witnesses, Israeli troops
fired into their home on Friday evening. Informed Palestinians said Salim was unarmed and did not
belong to any political group.
Also on Friday, Palestinian Muhammad al-Faqha, 18, was shot
dead by an Israeli sniper apparently for violating curfew
orders.
In other parts of Nablus, Israeli soldiers rounded
up hundreds of male residents and confined them in schoolyards
for hours in scorching heat.
In
dire straits
Since
Thursday, the occupation forces have blocked off all roads and
junctions leading to Nablus's old town with barbed wire
and rocks, and
detonated several old buildings.
As a result of the blockade,
humanitarian conditions in the town have sharply
deteriorated. There is a shortage of
food.
Israeli soldiers take up
position inside a home as children
cower
Additionally, two
neighbourhoods - Raa al-Ain and Faisal Street - are under
curfew.
The Red Cross and other relief agencies have tried to deliver
food and milk but their attempts have been
unsuccessful.
The Aljazeera team was denied permission to enter the town on
Friday and Saturday.
Israel
justifies its regular incursions into Palestinian population centres
as necessary for preventing militant attacks on Israeli soldiers and
settlers.
Palestinians say the raids often take the form of violent
rampages in which civilians are killed, homes are destroyed and
public infrastructure and private property
vandalised.
Tulkarim
violence
In a separate development, the Israeli army used tear gas,
rubber bullets and truncheons to disperse some 2000 Palestinian,
Israeli and international demonstrators protesting against the
building of the annexation wall west of Tulkarim, in northern West
Bank.
Medical sources said several protesters were injured in
scuffles with soldiers while others complained of symptoms
associated with tear-gas inhalation.
Earlier, Palestinian medical sources had accused
Israel of using a
"sinister variety" of crowd-control gases which had serious effects
on victims - such as recurrent convulsions, blurred vision, widening
of the eye pupil and stomach pain.
"The occupation army doesn't hesitate to
open fire on civilians. They think that we are a hostilepopulation because we
demand an end to their
occupation"
Anat Aalatira,
Coordinator-Nablus,
Health
Emergency Services
Awni Khatib, professor of chemistry at HebronUniversity, said the new symptoms – particularly
the violent convulsions experienced by some Palestinian protesters outside the
village of Sawiya, southwest of Nablus - suggested
that the Israeli army may be using a new class of chemicals that lie somewhere
between normal tear gas and chemical weapons.
On Friday a special United Nations investigating team
criticised Israel for excessive use
of force and destruction of homes in the occupied Palestinian
territories.
In a joint statement, the team urged the Security Council to
deploy an international protection force to stop Israeli
abuses.