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Dubai’s ‘Museum of the Future’ to open on February 22

By - Feb 13,2022 - Last updated at Feb 13,2022

AMMAN — Dubai’s “Museum of the Future” will open its doors on February 22, welcoming guests to “embark on a journey to the year 2071”.

The Museum of the Future is a “living museum aiming to contribute to a deep intellectual movement, through connecting thinkers and experts from around the world and acting as a test bed for future generations to create innovative solutions for the challenges facing society”, read a statement from the UAE Government Media Office.  

As described by Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President, Prime Minister and Ruler of Dubai, the Museum of the Future is “the most beautiful building on Earth”. 

“It is a spectacular building that ‘speaks Arabic,’ representing the revival of Arab excellence in the fields of science, mathematics and research, and an appreciation of the past Arab intellectuals that aims at resuming Arab civilisation and renaissance,” the statement said.

Rising 77 metres above the ground, the pillarless structure was built with robotic technology and is powered through solar energy.

The museum’s exhibits employ virtual and augmented reality, data analysis, artificial intelligence and human-machine interaction.

The five exhibits focus on the future of space travel and living, climate change and ecology, health, wellness and spirituality, according to the statement.

The museum will become the headquarters of the “Great Arab Minds” initiative, launched by Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, which aims to find 1,000 great Arab thinkers, the statement said.

 

12 hurt in foiled Yemeni Houthi drone attack on Saudi airport

By - Feb 10,2022 - Last updated at Feb 10,2022

This file photo taken on August 31 shows the entrance of Saudi Arabia's Abha airport in the popular mountain resort of Abha in the southwest of the country (AFP photo)



RIYADH — Twelve people were injured by falling debris on Thursday when the Saudi military blew up a Yemeni rebel drone targeting an airport close to the border, officials said.

Fragments fell to the ground after the interception of the drone over Abha International Airport, which has previously been targeted in similar assaults by the Iran-backed insurgents.

The Houthis claimed responsibility for the attack in a tweet, saying they had targeted an airport "used for military action against Yemen" and warning citizens to "stay away" from such sites.

The Houthis, fighting a Saudi-led coalition since 2015, have frequently launched drone attacks at targets in the kingdom including airports and oil installations.

In recent weeks, they have also launched deadly cross-border attacks for the first time against fellow coalition member the United Arab Emirates, after suffering a series of battlefield defeats at the hands of UAE-trained pro-government forces.

"Saudi defence forces destroyed a drone launched towards Abha International Airport," the official Saudi Press Agency (SPA) said.

The SPA said "12 civilians" were hurt when the unmanned aircraft was intercepted, including citizens of Bangladesh, India, Nepal, the Philippines and Sri Lanka, as well as two Saudis.

In response, the Saudi-led coalition said it would strike positions from which the Houthis launch drones in Sanaa, the rebel-held capital of Yemen.

"We ask civilians in Sanaa to evacuate civilian sites used for military purposes for the next 72 hours," it said, quoted by SPA.

'War crime' 

"As a result of the interception process, some shrapnel of the drone was scattered after its interception inside the internal perimeter of the airport," coalition spokesman Brigadier General Turki Al Maliki told SPA.

He said Abha was a "civilian airport that is protected under international humanitarian law" and accused the rebels of a "war crime".

The White House said President Joe Biden reaffirmed in a phone call Wednesday with Saudi King Salman the "US commitment to support Saudi Arabia in the defence of its people and territory" from Houthi attacks.

Abha lies in the kingdom's southwestern mountains and is popular, particularly during summer, with Saudis and expatriates desperate to escape the scorching heat.

Border provinces of Saudi Arabia have come under frequent drone or missile attack by the rebels, in what the Houthis say is retaliation for a deadly bombing campaign carried out by coalition aircraft against rebel-held areas.

Most have been safely intercepted by Saudi air defences, but in late December an attack on Jizan province on the Red Sea coast saw two people killed and seven wounded.

In December, the coalition said the Houthis had fired more than 400 ballistic missiles and launched over 850 attack drones at Saudi Arabia in the past seven years, killing a total of 59 civilians.

The UAE has also been on alert since a drone and missile attack killed three oil workers in Abu Dhabi on January 17.

Authorities have since thwarted three similar attacks.

The January 17 attack was the first deadly assault on the UAE claimed by the Houthis, opening a new phase in the Yemeni war and puncturing the Gulf state's image as a regional safe haven.

The UAE-trained Giants Brigades has this year inflicted heavy losses on the Huthis, disrupting their efforts to seize Marib city, the government's last major stronghold in the rebel-dominated north.

Yemen's civil war broke out in 2014 when the Huthis seized Sanaa, prompting the Saudi-led coalition to intervene the following year to prop up the internationally recognised government.

Hundreds of thousands of people have been killed directly or indirectly in the conflict, while millions have been displaced in what the UN calls the world's biggest humanitarian crisis.

On Thursday, the Norwegian Refugee Council(NRC) said civilian deaths and injuries in the war have almost doubled since UN human rights monitors were controversially removed in October.

"The removal of this crucial human rights investigative body took us back to unchecked, horrific violations," NRC's Yemen country director Erin Hutchinson said.

Libya parliament names rival PM in challenge to unity govt

By - Feb 10,2022 - Last updated at Feb 10,2022

A grab from a handout video release by the Libyan House of Representatives shows the parliament in session in the eastern city of Tobruk on Thursday (AFP photo)


TRIPOLI — Libya found itself with two prime ministers on Thursday, after its parliament named a rival to replace the existing unity government's chief Abdulhamid Dbeibah, threatening a new power struggle in the war-torn nation.

The House of Representatives, based in Libya's east, "unanimously approved Fathi Bashagha to head the government", the parliament's spokesman Abdullah Bliheg said in a tweet.

The move threatened to deepen the struggle for control between the assembly and the Tripoli-based administration of Dbeibah, while experts warned of potential violence in the capital in western Libya.

It came hours after Libyan media carried unconfirmed reports that Dbeibah's car was targeted by gunfire overnight, without specifying whether he was inside the vehicle at the time.

The construction tycoon, appointed a year ago as part of United Nations-led peace efforts, has vowed only to hand power to a government that emerges from a democratic vote.

His administration had a mandate to lead the country to elections last December 24, but the polls were cancelled amid bitter divisions over their legal basis and the candidacies of several controversial figures.

Parliament speaker Aguila Saleh, who like Dbeibah and Bashagha had been a presidential candidate, has since spearheaded efforts to replace the unity government.

The assembly had considered seven candidates to lead the administration. But shortly before Thursday's confirmation vote, Saleh had announced that Bashagha's only remaining challenger, former interior ministry official Khaled Al Bibass, had withdrawn from the race.

The live television feed cut just before the vote took place.

'Groundhog Day' 

 

Experts warned that Thursday's vote threatens a repeat of a 2014 schism which saw two parallel governments emerge.

"Libya has two prime ministers. Again. Groundhog Day," Anas El Gomati of Libyan think tank the Sadeq Institute wrote in a tweet.

In a televised address on Tuesday, Dbeibah had vowed he would "accept no new transitional phase or parallel authority" and declared he would only hand over power to an elected government.

Bashagha and Dbeibah, both from the powerful port city of Misrata, have the support of rival armed groups in the Libyan capital and the surroundings.

"Dbeibah is refusing to step down, so there is potential for some kind of conflict in Tripoli and beyond, and it could get ugly really fast," Amanda Kadlec, a former member of the UN Panel of Experts on Libya, told AFP.

"Bashagha and Dbeibah both have deep connections across western Libya, and the militias will move with whomever they see as having power.

"The Tripoli militias might also take a wait-and-see approach," she added. "Alliance-hopping is part of the playbook in Libya."

The UN, western powers and even some members of parliament have called for Dbeibah to stay in his role until elections, for which a new date has not yet been set.

Peter Millett, a former UK ambassador to Libya, said the main division now was "between the Libyan people -- who want elections -- and the political elite, who don't."

"The motivation of many MPs is to hang on to jobs and privileges rather than allow for a smooth process leading to elections," he told AFP.

"This seems like a decision taken to deprive the people of the right to vote by delaying elections even further and causing potential instability in Tripoli."

 

Pollution clean-up aims to create Gaza's first nature reserve

By - Feb 10,2022 - Last updated at Feb 10,2022

A photo shows a view of Wadi Gaza, a wetland area in the central Gaza Strip on Wednesday (AFP photo)



GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories — The road meandering towards Gaza Valley is notorious for the stench of pollution choking the plant and animal life that once flourished in the Palestinian enclave's biggest wetland.

That is expected to change after the sullied habitat was declared Gaza's first nature reserve, set for a UN-backed, decade long clean-up effort under the territory's Hamas Islamist rulers.

"The valley will return to its beautiful natural state" for local people to walk through and enjoy, said Jaber Abu Hajeer, the mayor of the area known as Wadi Gaza.

The fouling of the valley with raw sewerage, wastewater and rubbish is a consequence of chronic under-development in the strip that has been blockaded by Israel since 2007.

Gaza's poor infrastructure cannot manage the waste produced by a population that has rapidly grown to 2.3 million.

For more than three decades, sewage was pumped straight into Wadi Gaza and parts of its became dumping grounds for household waste and construction debris.

What was once a "beautiful nature reserve" gradually became "a swamp full of insects, snakes and bacteria, an out-of-control dump", said Abdel-Fattah Abd Rabbo, an environmental specialist at the Islamic University of Gaza.

Until last year, some 16,000 cubic metres of wastewater were pumped into the valley every day, say local authorities, causing a range of health problems for families living along the waterway that empties into the Mediterranean Sea.

Local resident Abdulkarim Al Louh said "unfortunately, due to the political situation that we are living under, the reserve got destroyed and was transformed into a waste water swamp".

He said he hoped that reversing the damage "will clear the area of the diseases, water waste, insects and mosquitos that all Wadi Gaza residents suffer from".

 

'Green belt' 

 

The pumping of untreated effluent into the valley stopped last year, when a new treatment plant opened in central Gaza, but Wadi Gaza's full rehabilitation is expected to take time.

The United Nations Development Programme is backing a 10-year, $66 million effort, led by five local Gazan governments, that aims to make the area an urgently needed ecological oasis.

A UNDP project coordinator, Muhammad Abu Shaaban, said the goal is create a "green belt", rich in biodiversity.

Step one is the clean-up, and municipal staff were on site last week trying to clear the creek of filth.

The next phase is a massive tree-planting effort, ahead of infrastructure improvements including better road access to make the area attractive to local tourists.

Abu Shaaban said the master plan aims to solve "all the environmental issues in the valley", including pollution, encroachment, building violations and "the floods the valley has been suffering from over the years".

Gaza's population, which has endured the crippling blockade and waves of conflict between Hamas and Israel, have few outdoor recreational spaces other than the coastline.

Israel and Egypt tightly control access in and out of Gaza and foreign visitors are largely kept away.

Mayor Hajeer pledged that, when the restoration project is completed, Wadi Gaza will become "a cultural, sporting and tourist attraction".

Abdulrahim Abu Al Konboz, director of solid waste management in Gaza, said all residents "will benefit from this programme since the water that runs through Wadi Gaza will be clean and free of pollutants when it reaches the sea.

"Gaza beach in the summer will be free of the pollution which used to come from the Wadi Gaza area."

 

Israel hits missile targets in Syria — occupation forces

Syria says one soldier killed, five others wounded

By - Feb 09,2022 - Last updated at Feb 09,2022

A metal cutout of an Israeli soldier at an army post in Mount Bental near the Syrian border in the occupied Golan Heights on Wednesday (AFP photo)

OCUUPIED JERUSALEM — Israel launched strikes against targets in Syria early Wednesday, Israeli occupation forces claimed, hitting anti-aircraft batteries in response to a missile fired from Syria.

Sirens were sounded in the northern Israeli Arab city of Umm Al-Fahm after the Syrian missile launch but it exploded in mid-air, the Israeli occupation forces tweeted.

"In response to the anti-aircraft missile launched from Syria earlier tonight, we just struck surface-to-air missile targets in Syria, including radar and anti-aircraft batteries," it said.

Syrian state media said the country's air defences had been activated against Israeli fire "in the vicinity of Damascus".

Citing a military source, it said Israeli aerial attacks began shortly before 1:00 am and were accompanied at 1:10 am by surface-to-surface missile strikes "from the direction of the occupied Golan".

"Our aerial defences confronted the enemy's missiles and shot some of them down," the Syrian news agency SANA said.

SANA said one soldier was killed and five others wounded, "along with material damage".

Israel rarely comments on the air strikes it carries out in Syria but has said repeatedly it will not allow its archfoe Iran to extend its footprint in the country.

Since civil war broke out in Syria in 2011, Israel has carried out hundreds of air strikes on Syrian territory, targeting government positions as well as allied Iran-backed forces and Hizbollah fighters.

Iran Guards unveil missile said to put Israel in reach

By - Feb 09,2022 - Last updated at Feb 09,2022

This handout photo made available on Wednesday by the official website of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps Sepahnews shows surface-to-surface missiles displayed in an undisclosed location in Iran (AFP photo)

TEHRAN — Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps on Wednesday announced the development of a surface-to-surface missile whose stated range would put arch foe Israel within reach.

The Guards' Sepahnews website said the missile was named the Khaybarchekan after a victorious battle fought by the Prophet Mohammed in the seventh century.

Armed forces chief of staff Mohammad Bagheri described it as a strategic, "long-range" missile.

The Guards' Sepahnews website said the missile has a range of 1,450 kilometres, runs on solid fuel and is capable of penetrating anti-missile systems.

It was unveiled during a visit to a surface-to-surface missile base of the Guards' air force, with the chief of the aerospace department Amirali Hajizadeh present.

"Its manoeuvrability and extreme speed allow it to reach targets within a radius of 1,450 kilometres," the website said.

Iran has the largest arsenal of missiles in the Middle East.

On December 24, the Islamic republic fired 16 ballistic missiles to conclude military drills described by generals as a warning to Israel.

Israel is located little more than 1,000 kilometres from Iran's western frontier.

Bagheri said on Monday that Iran was "self-sufficient in terms of military equipment", noting it could become one of the world's largest arms exporters if US sanctions were lifted.

The International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) says Iran has about 20 types of ballistic missiles as well as cruise missiles and drones.

Their capabilities vary, with the Qiam-1 having a range of 800 kilometres and the Ghadr-1 able to reach 1,800 kilometres.

The IISS, a London-based think tank, says Iran's current priority is to increase the accuracy of its missiles.

Hope Probe marks first anniversary, celebrates key new discoveries

By - Feb 09,2022 - Last updated at Feb 09,2022

A view of the fully illuminated hemisphere of Mars as seen by the UAE’s Hope orbiter on September 15, 2021 (Photo courtesy of the Emirates Mars Mission)

AMMAN — The Emirates Mars Mission (EMM), the first Arab interplanetary mission, on Wednesday celebrated the first anniversary of its successful entry into Mars’ orbit and the gathering of a unique trove of Mars observations by the Hope Probe.

One year on, “the autonomous spacecraft has achieved historic milestones as part of its mandate to expand our understanding of the Martian planet”, said a statement from the mission.

The Hope Probe successfully reached Mars’ orbit at 19:42 on February 9, 2021, completing one of the most complex and intricate stages of its mission, after a 493-million-kilometre, seven-month journey through space. 

The probe’s arrival marked “a historic achievement for the Emirates and the Arab world and has resulted in unique and challenging observations of the Red Planet that have not only confounded our understanding of the Red Planet but added immeasurably to our knowledge of Mars’ complex and fascinating atmospheric dynamics”, read the statement.

Sarah Bint Yousef Al Amiri, Minister of State for Advanced Technology and Chairwoman of the UAE Space Agency, said: "Tuesday, February 9, 2021 has become an historic occasion for the UAE, marking a unique achievement for our young nation. The Hope Probe is an inspiring success story for the youth of the UAE and the Arab world in general and comes as the culmination of a multinational effort to drive the development of our space sector, contribute to our growing space sector and bring new insights into our human understanding of our nearest planetary neighbour – Mars."

Salem Butti Salem Al Qubaisi, Director General of the UAE Space Agency, said that February 9, 2021 marks “a defining moment” in the history of the national space sector. 

"The successful arrival of the probe and the unprecedented scientific data it collects contribute to strengthening the UAE's position regionally and globally in the space sector," he said. 

"In addition, these achievements open up broad prospects for the development and prosperity of the national space sector aimed at boosting its contribution to the UAE’s GDP — as it is one of the most prominent sectors of the future economy based on innovation and knowledge," he added.

Omran Sharaf, Director of the Emirates Mars Mission (Hope Probe), said that the celebration of the first anniversary of the spacecraft’s successful arrival is “the culmination of years of tireless and dedicated work by the Emirati project team together with our knowledge partners at the University of Boulder, Colorado”. 

It reflects the UAE’s significant contribution to the scientific progress of humanity, as it provides unprecedented data about the Red Planet, he noted.

He said the probe has registered numerous scientific achievements by observing previously-unknown phenomena. It will continue its scientific mission, which aims to provide the first comprehensive picture of the Red Planet's climate and atmosphere, benefiting from its unique 25-degree elliptical orbit, which enables it to collect data and high-resolution images of the planet's atmosphere every 225 hours, or 9.5 days.

 

170 rotations around Mars

 

Since its arrival, Hope Probe has circled the Red Planet over 170 times, at a rate of one cycle every 55 hours. So far, the data captured by Hope Probe has been made available in two tranches, with a commitment to continue publishing and making new batches available every three months.

The first two batches of scientific data were published in October and January respectively. 

The Hope Probe carries three instruments on board: the EXI camera system captures high-resolution digital colour images of the planet and enables the measurement of ice and ozone in the lower atmosphere; The Emirates Infra-red Spectrometer (EMIRS) measures the temperature and distribution of dust, water vapour and ice clouds in the lower atmosphere; and the Emirates Ultraviolet Spectrometer (EMUS) measures oxygen and carbon monoxide in the thermal layer, and hydrogen and oxygen in the upper atmosphere. 

The Hope Probe has made a number of key new observations of Martian atmospheric phenomena, including the elusive discrete aurora on Mars’ nightside, remarkable concentrations of oxygen and carbon monoxide and never-before seen images of Martian dust storms as they billow across the planetary surface.

 

In Iraq’s Mosul, library rises from ashes of Daesh reign

By - Feb 09,2022 - Last updated at Feb 09,2022

A librarian picks a book from the library collection of the University of Iraq’s northern city of Mosul, on January 31 (AFP photo)

MOSUL, Iraq — The storied library of Iraq’s Mosul University boasted a million titles before Daesh group rampaged through it, toppling book shelves and burning ancient texts.

Now, almost five years after their defeat, the war-battered northern metropolis is trying to rebuild the pride of the city long known as a literature hub boasting countless booksellers and archives guarding rare manuscripts.

Mohamed Younes, technical director of the prestigious university library, recalls the carnage he witnessed after Mosul was recaptured from Daesh in mid-2017 following long and gruelling street battles.

“When we came back, we saw... the books pulled from the shelves, thrown on the ground and burned,” he said.

Thousands of texts on philosophy and law, science and poetry which in some way contradicted the Daesh’s extremist world view had gone up in flames.

Some of the most valuable titles were sold on the black market.

“Before, we had more than a million titles, some of which couldn’t be found in any other university in Iraq,” said Younes.

When the militants were first at the gates of the city, he said, “we were only able to move the rare books and a number of foreign periodicals”.

With the Daesh group’s brutal takeover of Mosul, 85 per cent of the collection was lost.

Before Daesh, Mosul University was “the mother of all books”, said former student Tarek Attiya, 34, who is now enrolled at Tikrit university.

“There is a huge difference between what used to be and the situation after Daesh,” he said.

 

Refurbished building 

 

Now there is a revival going on to, with the help of donations, slowly line the library shelves with books again.

The library building, refurbished with financing from a UN agency, is set to reopen this month. Four floors high with a sleek glass exterior, it will have an initial 32,000 books.

It will also feature a digital trove of e-books, with a view to eventually rebuilding a million-strong collection.

Ahead of the opening, the books have been housed in the narrow premises of the university’s engineering faculty where shelves are overflowing and titles are stacked on every available surface.

Significant donations from Arab and international universities have been received to “enable the revival of the library”, said the director.

Renowned figures in Mosul and across Iraq have also contributed by “dipping into their personal” collections, he added.

The northern metropolis of Mosul has historically been a hub for merchants and aristocrats, with a rich cultural and intellectual life.

A commercial crossroad of the Middle East, Mosul was able to preserve thousands of rare and ancient works, notably religious texts.

Iraq’s first printing press was operating in Mosul in the second half of the 19th century.

 

Appetite for reading 

 

Signs of Mosul’s fledgling cultural revival have begun to take root — at least where there was anything left to save.

The library of the Waqf, the state body that manages Islamic endowments, once contained manuscripts dating back 400 years, said its head, Ahmed Abd Ahmed.

But, he added sadly, “they have all disappeared”.

Elsewhere in the city, Al Nujaifi Street, historically lined with booksellers, still bears the scars of destruction wrought by the militants.

Many shops are abandoned and mounds of rubble lay under old stone arches — but a handful of shopkeepers have reopened their doors after paying out of pocket for restoration work.

Mosul’s central public library — which was founded a century ago last year and had boasted more than 120,000 titles — reopened its doors in late 2019, after restoration.

“We lost 2,350 books on literature, sociology or religion,” said its Director Jamal Al Abd Rabbo.

But he added that public donations and purchases had allowed him to rebuild the collection up to 132,000 titles.

Old leather-bound books with worn spines and creased pages still line the library’s shelves.

Crucially, the public’s appetite for literature remains unbroken, he said, and “some of our visitors come daily, for an hour or two, to read”.

 

Tunisian judges strike after president scraps watchdog

By - Feb 09,2022 - Last updated at Feb 09,2022

Tunisian citizens and lawyers leave the court of the governorate of Ariana after the announcement of a strike of the judges on Wednesday following the dissolution of the supreme council of the Judiciary by President Saied (AFP photo)

TUNIS — Tunisian judges on Wednesday started a widely observed nationwide strike, days after President Kais Saied announced he would dissolve a key judicial watchdog.

Saied on the weekend moved to scrap the Supreme Judicial Council (CSM), accusing it of blocking politically sensitive investigations and being influenced by his nemesis, the Islamist-inspired Ennahdha Party.

His move against the CSM — after he sacked the government and froze parliament in July then moved to rule by decree — has sparked condemnation from world powers and rights groups.

Some have accused him of taking another step towards authoritarian rule in Tunisia, a country often lauded as the only democracy to emerge from the 2011 Arab revolts.

The Tunisian Magistrates’ Association (AMT) responded by urging judges across the North African nation to strike on Wednesday and Thursday.

AMT chief Anas Hamadi told AFP that at least 70 per cent of judges had adhered to the strike according to initial figures.

The Syndicate of Judges, a separate union that has called for judicial reforms, was not supporting the strike action.

An AFP journalist said no hearings were being held at the lower court in the Ariana governorate, part of greater Tunis.

Hamadi said all courts in the Manouba, Sfax and Tataouine provinces were also closed, adding that “a minority” of judges had gone to work elsewhere.

He said Saied’s decision to scrap the CSM was “a danger to the state and the judiciary, one of the key pillars of a democratic state”.

“The president of the Republic is missing every opportunity for dialogue and consultation to find solutions that could preserve the independence of the judiciary,” he added.

On Wednesday, a group of 45 civil society groups issued a statement rejecting “any interference by the executive authority in the judiciary’s work”.

They said the CSM, despite its “shortcomings”, was the only institution guaranteeing the judiciary’s independence.

Saied has insisted he has no intention of “interfering” in the justice system, saying it was “necessary” to remove a council accused of blocking investigations into the 2013 assassinations of leftist political figures Chokri Belaid and Mohamed Brahmi.

Israeli forces kill three Palestinians in West Bank raid

By - Feb 08,2022 - Last updated at Feb 08,2022

Mourners attend the funeral of the three Palestinians killed by Israeli forces on Tuesday in the West Bank city of Nablus (AFP photo)

NABLUS, Palestinian Territories — Israeli forces killed three Palestinians on Tuesday during a daytime, leaving a vehicle in the West Bank city of Nablus riddled with bullet holes.

Israeli Defence Minister Benny Gantz praised the raid and said he had ordered an increase in "counterterrorism activities" due to recent shootings in the West Bank, a Palestinian territory occupied by Israeli forces since the 1967 war.

The Palestinian health ministry and Israeli forces both confirmed the three deaths.

Israeli forces and internal security agency, the Shin Bet, released a statement identifying the dead as "armed terrorists who were... killed during clashes with the security forces".

The Palestinian Authority condemned the raid as a “summary execution”.

Israeli forces said the three were responsible for recent shooting attacks on Israeli forces and civilians, adding that no Israeli personnel were hurt in the operation.

Sources in the Palestinian Fateh movement identified two of the dead as Adham Mabrouk and Muhammad Al Dakhil, who they said were affiliated with the Al Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades.

According to a Palestinian security source, “Israeli soldiers who were in a civilian vehicle intercepted a Palestinian vehicle and directly fired at it, which led to the deaths of three young men”.

AFP reporters in Nablus saw a bullet-riddled windshield of a silver car that eyewitnesses said Israeli forces targeted.

The witnesses, who requested anonymity citing security concerns, said one of the vehicles carrying Israeli forces was a yellow taxi.

‘No immunity’ 

Defence Minister Gantz said the raid “eliminated the terrorist cell that carried out shooting attacks in recent weeks”, while Prime Minister Naftali Bennett boasted in a tweet that “terrorists have no immunity”.

Hundreds of Palestinians thronged the streets outside the Rafidia hospital in Nablus as the bodies of the men were carried out.

The PA foreign ministry statement said in a statement that it “holds the Israeli government headed by Naftali Bennett fully and directly responsible for this heinous crime”.

Ties between the PA, led by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, and Israel remain fraught, though there have been signs of a thaw in recent months following a series of high-level meetings, including Gantz hosting Abbas at his home.

Some 475,000 Israelis live in settlements among around 2.9 million Palestinians in the West Bank, fuelling tensions in the area that Palestinians claim as a part of their future state.

Bennett, the former head of a settler lobbying council, opposes Palestinian statehood and has ruled out formal peace talks with the PA under his watch, saying he will focus instead on improving economic conditions in the West Bank.

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