Following the Huwara incident, Israel begins an arresting operation in Palestinian cities

 


After two Israeli men were injured in an attack in the northern West Bank town of Huwara on Sunday, the Israel Defense Forces detained a number of Palestinians hours after the conclusion of the meeting between Israeli and Palestinian officials in Sharm El-Sheikh, which was presided over by Egypt and was also attended by Jordan and the US.

Businesses in Huwara were shut down out of concern about Israeli settlers retaliating assaults, and there was unrest after IDF troops were stationed on the streets.

On Monday morning, the IDF assaulted a number of towns and villages in the Jenin governorate and stepped up security around the northern West Bank city of Nablus.

A few days before the start of Ramadan, Israeli police detained a number of Palestinian activists in East Jerusalem.

Israeli military were extensively stationed within the town and on house rooftops, according to Huwara's mayor Muin Al-Dumaidi, who told Arab News that this prevented store owners from opening their establishments.

Al-Dumaidi stated that as trade serves as the foundation of the town's citizens' livelihoods, the town's shutdown will "devastate Huwara's economy" and force shops off of the main street ahead of Ramadan.

According to him, the closure is intended to make it easier for Israeli settlers to move around the town without being hampered by heavy traffic.

Al-Dumaidi added, "Business owners are phoning me and asking when we will be able to reopen them, and I have no response.

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