200 Nazi Jewish settlers attack Palestinian village with firebombs

NOVANEWS

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More than 200 Nazi Jewish settlers attacked the Palestinian villages of Wad al-Haseen and Wad al-Nasara near the illegal Nazi Jewish settlement of Kiryat Arba overnight in the eastern Hebron district of the occupied southern West Bank, locals and medics said.
During the attack, Nazi Jewish settlers threw stones and firebombs at Palestinian homes and injured at least three people, two of which were minors, while Nazi forces later shot and injured one Palestinian with live fire.
Nazi army spokesperson said she did not have reports of any injuries with live fire.
The spokesperson said clashes between Palestinians and Nazi Jewish settlers broke out in the area, after which Israeli forces “arrived at the scene and dispersed the clashes using riot dispersal means.”
Kayed Daana, one of the residents whose home was attacked said that dozens of Nazi Jewish settlers attacked her neighborhood and injured at least three of her neighbors who have been identified as 40-year-old Imad and two minors, Abdullah, 13, and Muhammad, 17.
Muhammad’s injuries were the most serious of the three, as he was hit in the chest with one of the fire bombs, medics said.
Daana told Ma’an that she would like to urge the International Red Cross and others in the international community intervene against Nazi regime violations and attacks on Palestinians.
Bassam al-Jabri, one of the residents, said he saw the attacking Nazi Jewish settlers cutting the blockade fence that separates the illegal Nazi Jewish settlement of Kiryat Arab from nearby Palestinian homes, while under the protection of the Nazi troops before they attacked his neighborhood with fire bombs.
Al-Jabri said his house was one of those set ablaze, but that he and his neighbors were able to put the fire out before the fire was able to damage his whole home.
During the attacks, Palestinian villagers fled to their local mosques and used the mosque amplifier to call for help from neighboring Palestinian villages and communities, who responded to their calls.
Nazi forces then got involved, shooting tear gas at Palestinians who showed up to help.
Community member Farid al-Razim, told Ma’an that villagers in his area were attacked by Nazi Jewish settlers with firebombs, while Nazi army  were shooting tear gas, and that one of the Palestinians from a neighboring village who had come to help was shot and injured with live fire.
While relations between Palestinian residents and Nazi Jewish settlers in the occupied West Bank are normally tense, the situation has been significantly deteriorating since settlers’ torched a home belonging to the Duwabsha family in Nablus on July 31.
An 18-month-old toddler was burned alive during the attack, while his mother and father succumbed to their burn wounds while being treated at separate hospitals. The family’s four-year-old son is the only remaining survivor of the attack.
On Oct. 1, suspected Palestinians shot and killed Eitam and Naama Henkin, two Nazi Jewish settlers who were driving between the illegal settlements of Itamar and Elon More in an area near Huwwara in Nablus.
Their four children, aged between four months and nine years, were found unharmed in the back of the car.
It is speculated that the shootings were a revenge attack on Nazi Jewish settlers, following months of increased restrictions at the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound and calls from Nazi right-wing Jewish groups, urging their supporters to visit the compound, which is venerated by Nazi racist Jews as the Temple Mount.
Following the shooting, hundreds of Nazi Jewish settlers rioted across the occupied West Bank, with multiple attacks reported on Palestinian homes and vehicles.
Palestinian towns and villages in the Nablus area are surrounded by Nazi Jewish illegal settlements and outposts, many of which are protected by the Nazi military and have gained notoriety for being comprised of the most extremist Nazi Jewish settlers.
The Palestinian government has no jurisdiction over Nazi regime in the West Bank, and violent acts carried out by Nazi Jewish settlers often occur in the presence of Nazi military forces who rarely act to protect Palestinian residents.
Palestinians are therefore left to fend for themselves as few options for their personal security remain.
While Nazi forces will detain a Palestinian in the occupied West Bank for possessing a knife or gun, Zionist living in the same area are legally able to carry such weapons.
Rights groups have criticized the Nazi regime for implementing different legal systems for Palestinians and Nazi settlers living in the same area.
Such practices, they say, protect the expansion of settlements while systematically removing the ability for Palestinians to move freely throughout the occupied territory.

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