ISRAEL - Teenagers stoned to death, Palestinians suspected

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BBC Wednesday, 9 May, 2001, 10:39 GMT 11:39 UK

Israeli teenagers 'stoned to death'

The bodies were found near a dried river bed in a ravine

The bodies of two Israeli teenagers have been discovered in a cave in the West Bank, apparently the latest victims in a bloody cycle of attacks in the Middle East.

The two youths, both aged 14, had been reported missing on Tuesday after skipping school and going hiking outside the Tekoa Jewish settlement near Bethlehem where they lived.

Police suspect the boys were stoned to death by Palestinian militants, spokesman Raffia Yaffe said.

Palestinian-Israeli tensions have risen since a four-month-old baby was killed by Israeli shrapnel during a bombardment of a refugee camp in Gaza on Monday.

Israeli soldiers carrying out the search for the killers arrested four Bedouin shepherds who inhabit the area, witnesses said.

'Terror escalation'

Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said the "horrifying murders" outside Tekoa amounted to "another escalation in the terrorist activities and violence carried out by the Palestinians against an innocent civilian population".

He called on the Palestinian Authority to "halt terrorism and stop the poisonous incitement against Israelis and Jews" in the official Palestinian media.

Palestinian officials have also condemned the killing; senior negotiator Saeb Erekat said children and civilians were unacceptable targets whether they were Palestinians or Israelis.

"But the short way for peace and stability is finishing the Israeli occupation," he said.

The dead boys have been identified as Yossi Ishran and Kobi Mandel, both them recent arrivals to the settlement. The Mandel family were immigrants from the US.

After the news broke, settlers threw stones at Palestinian cars and the Israeli army sealed off the nearby Arab village of Tuqu, Palestinian security officials said.

Settlement targets

On Tuesday, a body of another Israeli settler, who had been shot and stabbed, was found near the settlement of Itamar, south of Nablus.

The BBC's Middle East correspondent, Frank Gardner, says a clear pattern has been emerging in the latest Israel-Palestinian violence, with Palestinian militants increasingly focusing their attentions on Israeli settlements and those that live in them.

There has also been sporadic violence elsewhere in the Palestinian territories, with two mortar bombs fired at a settlement and a roadside bomb said to have exploded near a passing Israeli army patrol, both in the Gaza Strip.

There are no reports of casualties. The Israel army later launched a raid on Palestinian-controlled land in the northern Gaza Strip destroying a police post.

The settlements on Arab land captured by Israel in 1967 - which are illegal under international law - are one of the major sticking points blocking any long-term peace deal.

Palestinians say there can be no peace with Israel while their land remains under occupation, but Israel's Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has so far refused to consider a freeze on settlement activity while the violence continues.

-- Anonymous, May 09, 2001

Answers

Wednesday, May 9 11:01 PM SGT

New Palestinian group says it killed teenage settlers

JERUSALEM, May 9 (AFP) -

A caller claiming to represent a group namd Hezbollah Palestine said Wednesday it killed two 14-year-old settlers in the West Bank to avenge the death of a four-month-old Palestinian baby in Israeli shelling.

"I am from Hezbollah Palestine. We killed the two settlers today to avenge the killing of Iman Hiju," the anonymous caller told AFP.

"We are a new organisation working against Israeli occupation," he said, without giving any further details.

-- Anonymous, May 09, 2001


Wednesday May 9 2:42 PM ET
State Department Condemns Killings

WASHINGTON (AP) - The State Department denounced the slaying of two 14-year-old Israeli boys on the West Bank and said the Palestinian Authority (news - web sites) had expressed regret.

Spokesman Richard Boucher said the identity of the assailants was not known.

``It's a horrible, brutal killing of two youths,'' Boucher said. ``Our chief concern at this point is to be in touch with the families.''

The boys were bludgeoned to death with rocks and their bodies discovered in a West Bank cave Wednesday. Prime Minister Ariel Sharon (news - web sites) said they were victims of ``Palestinian terror.''

``I'm sure we are in touch with a lot of local authorities. I expect our consulate general in Jerusalem has been in touch with the Palestinians,'' Boucher said.

One of the victims, Kobi Mandel, whose family recently emigrated from Maryland, held both U.S. and Israeli citizenship. Police said Mandel and his friend, Yossi Ishran, may have been killed in a chance encounter with Palestinians, not in a planned attack.

On Capitol Hill, a demonstration was scheduled.

``The U.S. government has never offered a reward in a case involving Palestinian Arab killers of Americans who are being sheltered by (Yasser) Arafat,'' said Morton Klein, head of the Zionist Organization of America.

-- Anonymous, May 09, 2001


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