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Violence flares around Gaza after deadly Israeli raid

A woman reacts during a funeral of 10 Palestinians in Nablus. — Reuters
A woman reacts during a funeral of 10 Palestinians in Nablus. — Reuters
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GAZA: Israel launched air strikes on Gaza in return for rocket fire from the Palestinian enclave on Thursday, a day after the deadliest Israeli army raid in the occupied West Bank in nearly 20 years.


Eleven Palestinians, including a 16-year-old, were killed and more than 80 wounded by gunfire on Wednesday, the Palestinian health ministry said, when Israeli troops raided the flashpoint West Bank city of Nablus, drawing international appeals for calm.


The death toll was the highest since the second Palestinian intifada, or uprising, ended in 2005.


It was described as a "massacre" by top Palestinian official Hussein al Sheikh, who called for "international protection for our people".


The United States said it was "extremely concerned by the levels of violence" and called for a de-escalation. UN Middle East envoy Tor Wennesland travelled to the Gaza Strip on Thursday, his spokesman said.


Before dawn on Thursday, Palestinian militants fired rockets from Gaza at Israel and prompting air strikes by the army on multiple sites in the coastal enclave.


Palestinian militant group Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the rockets, after saying one of its commanders was killed in the Nablus raid.


Two hours later Israeli air strikes targeted a "weapons factory" and a "military camp" run by Gaza's Islamist rulers Hamas, the army said, sending plumes of black smoke into the sky.


UN chief Antonio Guterres said the "immediate priority must be to prevent further escalation".


"The situation in the occupied Palestinian territory is at its most combustible in years," he said.


The army said Wednesday's raid targeted three suspects implicated in West Bank shootings.


The Palestinian health ministry said those killed in Nablus were aged between 16 and 72.


Hours after the raid, the ministry announced the death of Anan Ennab, 66, from tear gas inhalation.


He had been in the market when the Israeli incursion began, his brother Allam Ennab said on Thursday.


"What happened yesterday in Nablus was a real massacre, like I've never seen before," the 68-year-old said.


Palestinian health officials said 82 people were hospitalised for gunshot wounds. The Palestinian Red Crescent Society said its medics also treated 250 cases of tear gas inhalation.


The wounded include Palestine TV journalist Mohammed al Khatib, who was shot in the hand.


Talaat Ziada, the head of the intensive care unit in Nablus's Rafidia hospital, said his youngest patient was an 11-year-old boy.


"It was a war zone in the Old City, and it was also a war zone here," he added.


"The corridors and stairs were covered in blood, and people were scrambling to check on their relatives."


Palestinian shops were closed on Thursday in annexed east Jerusalem and elsewhere in the West Bank, including Nablus, after a general strike was called in protest at the violence.


The Lions' Den, a Nablus-based militant group, said six of those killed were members of various Palestinian factions.


The Palestinian health ministry announced on Thursday a 30-year-old man died from his wounds, after being shot earlier this month by Israeli forces in Jenin.


Last year was the deadliest year in the territory since the United Nations started tracking casualties in 2005. — AFP


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