Today, Friday, a Palestinian boy and a young man were killed in the occupied West Bank by Israeli forces' fire, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health, and dozens were injured as a result of the occupation soldiers' attacks.

A video showed that the occupation soldiers attacked those who tried to save the martyr Mahdi Ladawda after he was shot by the occupation forces in the village of Al Mazraa, north of Ramallah, where the occupation soldiers beat and shot those present.

The Palestinian News Agency, Wafa (official), said that confrontations took place with the Israeli occupation forces, after the residents tried to repel an attack by settlers on a house in the Western Mazraa.

farm confrontations

The Palestinian Red Crescent Society (non-governmental) said that the outcome of what its crews dealt with in the farm confrontations amounted to 50 injuries, 9 of them with rubber bullets, 33 cases of suffocation with gas, and 8 cases of beating and assault by soldiers.

Meanwhile, Adel Daoud, 14, was killed by a bullet to the head at the site of the separation wall, south of Qalqilya, after the occupation forces stormed the village and stormed a house.

The Israeli army stated that "Israeli soldiers spotted a suspect throwing Molotov cocktails at them" near Qalqilya, and that they "responded by opening fire", indicating that a person was wounded, without giving further details.

refusal to occupy

Eyewitnesses told Anadolu Agency that dozens of Palestinians were injured in clashes with the Israeli army after Friday prayers, during protests against the occupation and settlements in various villages and towns in the West Bank, including Kafr Qaddoum, Beita and Beit Dajan.

Usually, on Fridays, the West Bank witnesses protests against the expansion of Israeli settlements and repeated violations. In return, the Israeli forces intensify their military operations and raids.

According to the data of the Israeli human rights movement Peace Now, there are about 666,000 settlers, 145 settlements and 140 random outposts (not licensed by the Israeli government) in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem.