8 aug 2017

Israeli soldiers invaded, on Tuesday morning, several communities in the northern West Bank governorate of Nablus, searched many homes and abducted nine Palestinians.
The soldiers invaded many neighborhoods in Nablus city, before storming and ransacking many homes and abducted six members of al-Fayed and Salama families.
The abducted Palestinians have been identified as Nour Mohammad Salama, Amir Mohammad Salama, Hammouda Freihat, Qais al-Ghoul, Qussai al-‘Arsan and ‘Ala al-Fayed.
It is worth mentioning that Nour and Amir are the brothers of Aws Mohammad Salama, 17, who was killed by Israeli army fire, along with Sa’ed Hasan Salah, 21, after the soldiers invaded Jenin and Jenin refugee camp, on Wednesday July 12th 2017.
Furthermore, the soldiers invaded homes in Kufur Ra’ey and Methaloon towns, and abducted two Palestinians; one of them has been identified as Shadi Nasser Sawalha, 23, from Kufur Ra’ey.
The soldiers invaded many neighborhoods in Nablus city, before storming and ransacking many homes and abducted six members of al-Fayed and Salama families.
The abducted Palestinians have been identified as Nour Mohammad Salama, Amir Mohammad Salama, Hammouda Freihat, Qais al-Ghoul, Qussai al-‘Arsan and ‘Ala al-Fayed.
It is worth mentioning that Nour and Amir are the brothers of Aws Mohammad Salama, 17, who was killed by Israeli army fire, along with Sa’ed Hasan Salah, 21, after the soldiers invaded Jenin and Jenin refugee camp, on Wednesday July 12th 2017.
Furthermore, the soldiers invaded homes in Kufur Ra’ey and Methaloon towns, and abducted two Palestinians; one of them has been identified as Shadi Nasser Sawalha, 23, from Kufur Ra’ey.

Israeli soldiers abducted, on Tuesday at dawn, two Palestinians, interrogated six others, and confiscated a truck, in the northern West Bank governorates of Nablus.
Dozens of soldiers invaded many neighborhoods in Nablus city, searched homes and abducted one Palestinian, identified as Tha’er al-Aghbar, from Ras al-Ein area.
The soldiers also detained a social figure, identified as Abdul-Rahim al-Hanbali, and interrogated him for several hours before releasing him.
In addition, the soldiers invaded Huwwara town, south of Nablus, abducted Mahmoud Ali Sa’ada, 45, and confiscated his truck after searching his home.
Furthermore, the soldiers invaded Qabalan town, south of Nablus, detained six young men, and interrogated them at a local hall before releasing them.
Dozens of soldiers invaded many neighborhoods in Nablus city, searched homes and abducted one Palestinian, identified as Tha’er al-Aghbar, from Ras al-Ein area.
The soldiers also detained a social figure, identified as Abdul-Rahim al-Hanbali, and interrogated him for several hours before releasing him.
In addition, the soldiers invaded Huwwara town, south of Nablus, abducted Mahmoud Ali Sa’ada, 45, and confiscated his truck after searching his home.
Furthermore, the soldiers invaded Qabalan town, south of Nablus, detained six young men, and interrogated them at a local hall before releasing them.

The Israeli occupation forces (IOF) at dawn Tuesday carried out an arrest campaign in different West Bank areas and interrogated Palestinian citizens.
A statement released by the Israeli army said that 11 Palestinian citizens were detained in the West Bank for their involvement in activities against Israel.
According to the statement, four Palestinians were kidnapped from their homes in Jenin refugee camp, two others in Meithalun and Kafr Ra’i towns (Jenin), two in Qalqilya city, one in Nablus and two in Burin and Huwara town (Nablus).
In a related context, local sources in Nablus said that the IOF kidnapped several citizens in the province at dawn before releasing most of them.
According to the sources, Israeli soldiers raided the house of 77-year-old Abdul-Rahim al-Hanbali, former head of the Nablus Zakat Committee, and took him to the Huwara military base where Shin Bet officers interrogated him before letting him go.
Hanbali told the Palestinian Information Center (PIC) that the officers questioned him about different issues in the presence of his son Omar, who has been in jail for about one month.
Meanwhile, the IOF stormed Qabalan town, south of Nablus, detained six local young men and interrogated them at a wedding venue before releasing them all later.
They also raided a house in Madama town, south of Nablus, without making arrests, and kidnapped a young man during a campaign in Nablus city.
Local sources said that soldiers kidnapped Thaer al-Aghbar from a house they ransacked in Ras al-Ein neighborhood of Nablus city.
Another military force kidnapped ex-detainee Mahmoud Sa’ada from his home in Huwara town, south of Nablus, and seized his car.
The IOF also stormed neighborhoods in Qalqilya city and al-Jalazoun refugee camp in Ramallah, raided homes, and teargased local young men during skirmishes with them.
IOF campaigns also took place in Beitunia town, west of Ramallah, and al-Darwa area of Halhoul town, north of al-Khalil, with no reported arrests.
A statement released by the Israeli army said that 11 Palestinian citizens were detained in the West Bank for their involvement in activities against Israel.
According to the statement, four Palestinians were kidnapped from their homes in Jenin refugee camp, two others in Meithalun and Kafr Ra’i towns (Jenin), two in Qalqilya city, one in Nablus and two in Burin and Huwara town (Nablus).
In a related context, local sources in Nablus said that the IOF kidnapped several citizens in the province at dawn before releasing most of them.
According to the sources, Israeli soldiers raided the house of 77-year-old Abdul-Rahim al-Hanbali, former head of the Nablus Zakat Committee, and took him to the Huwara military base where Shin Bet officers interrogated him before letting him go.
Hanbali told the Palestinian Information Center (PIC) that the officers questioned him about different issues in the presence of his son Omar, who has been in jail for about one month.
Meanwhile, the IOF stormed Qabalan town, south of Nablus, detained six local young men and interrogated them at a wedding venue before releasing them all later.
They also raided a house in Madama town, south of Nablus, without making arrests, and kidnapped a young man during a campaign in Nablus city.
Local sources said that soldiers kidnapped Thaer al-Aghbar from a house they ransacked in Ras al-Ein neighborhood of Nablus city.
Another military force kidnapped ex-detainee Mahmoud Sa’ada from his home in Huwara town, south of Nablus, and seized his car.
The IOF also stormed neighborhoods in Qalqilya city and al-Jalazoun refugee camp in Ramallah, raided homes, and teargased local young men during skirmishes with them.
IOF campaigns also took place in Beitunia town, west of Ramallah, and al-Darwa area of Halhoul town, north of al-Khalil, with no reported arrests.
7 aug 2017

Dalal Abu Hawa 39
There are currently 61 Palestinian women prisoners in Israeli jails, according to reports by the Asra Media Center. They include 10 minor girls and five women jailed without charge or trial under Israeli administrative detention, including Palestinian parliamentarian, national leader and leftist feminist Khalida Jarrar.
On Sunday, 6 August, Palestinian prisoner Dalal Abu Hawa, 39, from occupied Jerusalem, was released after a 12-month sentence inside Israeli occupation prisons. She was seized on 28 August 2016 and accused of transferring funds to Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails, especially those affiliated with Hamas. She is also barred from entering her home city of Jerusalem.
Her son, Omar, 17, is a Palestinian child prisoner who has been jailed for 17 months out of a two-year sentence, accused of throwing stones at occupation forces. She is the mother of six children and was separated from her then nine-month-old baby by her arrest by Israeli occupation forces.
At the same time, on early Sunday morning, Amina Abatli, the wife of Palestinian prisoner Adib al-Ghoulban, was seized by Israeli occupation forces along with eight other Palestinians. Al-Ghoulban has been held in Israeli prison for one and a half months and was ordered to administrative detention without charge or trial; first his uncle, Khamis al-Ghoulban was arrested by occupation forces and now his wife.
The number of women prisoners in Israeli jails has escalated in the past several months. There are reportedly 25 women held in Damon prison and 36 in HaSharon prison. 29 of the Palestinian women prisoners are still subjected to ongoing interrogation and have not been sentenced.
25 Palestinian women have been sentenced and are serving sentences of eight months to 16 years, and five women are held without charge or trial under administrative detention.
There are 10 Palestinian minor girls held in HaSharon prison, in addition to multiple 18-year-old women who have been jailed since they were girls and were sentenced as minor girls. One of the youngest women in Damon prison is Jamila Daoud Jaber, 18, of Salfit; she turned 18 while jailed by the Israeli occupation forces. She has been imprisoned since 7 May 2016. Esraa Sameeh Jaber, 18, from al-Khalil, has been imprisoned since 12 February 2017 and is not sentenced until today. Also from al-Khalil are Nour Zureiqat, 18, imprisoned for one year, and Lama al-Bakri, 17.
Amal Jamal Kabha, 17, from Jenin, is serving an 18-month sentence. She has been jailed since August 2016. Marah Louay Jaidi, 16, from Qalqilya, has been imprisoned since early 2017. The Jerusalemite prisoner, Malak Yousef Suleiman, 16, has been jailed since 9 February 2016 and like other Jerusalemite child prisoners, has been subject to an extremely lengthy sentence of 10 years.
Some of the other young Jerusalemites who have been subject to lengthy sentences include Marah Bakir, 18, sentenced to 8 years imprisonment, Nurhan Awad, 18, sentenced to 13 years imprisonment, and Manar Shweiki, 18, sentenced to 6 years in prison. All three were minors when seized by occupation forces and imprisoned.
A fellow child prisoner among the Palestinian girls is Hadia Ibrahim Arainat, 16, from Jericho, imprisoned since 3 March 2016 and serving a 3-year sentence. Malak al-Ghaliz, 14, is the youngest Palestinian girl prisoner, imprisoned since 20 May 2017, charged with possession of a knife.
The ages of the women prisoners range from 14 to 59 years. The eldest woman prisoner is Ibtisam Mousa, 59, of Gaza, seized on 19 May 2017 as she attempted to cross the Beit Hanoun/Erez crossing – in full possession of a permit from the Israeli occupation – accompanying her sister as she sought treatment for cancer.
The two Palestinian women prisoners serving the longest sentences are Shatila Abu Ayada, 24, from Kufr Qasem and a Palestinian from ’48, and Shurouq Dwayyat, 20, a Palestinian student from Jerusalem. Both are serving 16-year sentences inside Israeli occupation prisons and were subject to massive and highly disparate and unjust sentencing.
There are 11 women prisoners from Jerusalem and 12 from al-Khalil.
Five women are being held under administrative detention:
Palestinian parliamentarian and leftist national leader Khalida Jarrar, 54, was ordered to six months in administrative detention after she was seized by Israeli occupation forces on 2 July. Also ordered to administrative detention was Khitam Saafin, the President of the Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees, jailed for three months without charge or trial after she was seized simultaneously with Jarrar on 2 July.
Sabah Faraoun, 35, from Jerusalem, has been imprisoned without charge or trial under repeatedly renewed detention orders since 19 June 2016. Ihsan Dababseh, 32, was ordered to six months in administrative detention after she was seized by occupation forces on 27 February 2017. Afnan Ahmad Abu Haneya, 21, from Ramallah, was recently ordered to three months in administrative detention.
They are among approximately 500 total Palestinians imprisoned without charge or trial under administrative detention orders, which are indefinitely renewable. Palestinians have routinely spent years at a time jailed under such orders.
There are currently 61 Palestinian women prisoners in Israeli jails, according to reports by the Asra Media Center. They include 10 minor girls and five women jailed without charge or trial under Israeli administrative detention, including Palestinian parliamentarian, national leader and leftist feminist Khalida Jarrar.
On Sunday, 6 August, Palestinian prisoner Dalal Abu Hawa, 39, from occupied Jerusalem, was released after a 12-month sentence inside Israeli occupation prisons. She was seized on 28 August 2016 and accused of transferring funds to Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails, especially those affiliated with Hamas. She is also barred from entering her home city of Jerusalem.
Her son, Omar, 17, is a Palestinian child prisoner who has been jailed for 17 months out of a two-year sentence, accused of throwing stones at occupation forces. She is the mother of six children and was separated from her then nine-month-old baby by her arrest by Israeli occupation forces.
At the same time, on early Sunday morning, Amina Abatli, the wife of Palestinian prisoner Adib al-Ghoulban, was seized by Israeli occupation forces along with eight other Palestinians. Al-Ghoulban has been held in Israeli prison for one and a half months and was ordered to administrative detention without charge or trial; first his uncle, Khamis al-Ghoulban was arrested by occupation forces and now his wife.
The number of women prisoners in Israeli jails has escalated in the past several months. There are reportedly 25 women held in Damon prison and 36 in HaSharon prison. 29 of the Palestinian women prisoners are still subjected to ongoing interrogation and have not been sentenced.
25 Palestinian women have been sentenced and are serving sentences of eight months to 16 years, and five women are held without charge or trial under administrative detention.
There are 10 Palestinian minor girls held in HaSharon prison, in addition to multiple 18-year-old women who have been jailed since they were girls and were sentenced as minor girls. One of the youngest women in Damon prison is Jamila Daoud Jaber, 18, of Salfit; she turned 18 while jailed by the Israeli occupation forces. She has been imprisoned since 7 May 2016. Esraa Sameeh Jaber, 18, from al-Khalil, has been imprisoned since 12 February 2017 and is not sentenced until today. Also from al-Khalil are Nour Zureiqat, 18, imprisoned for one year, and Lama al-Bakri, 17.
Amal Jamal Kabha, 17, from Jenin, is serving an 18-month sentence. She has been jailed since August 2016. Marah Louay Jaidi, 16, from Qalqilya, has been imprisoned since early 2017. The Jerusalemite prisoner, Malak Yousef Suleiman, 16, has been jailed since 9 February 2016 and like other Jerusalemite child prisoners, has been subject to an extremely lengthy sentence of 10 years.
Some of the other young Jerusalemites who have been subject to lengthy sentences include Marah Bakir, 18, sentenced to 8 years imprisonment, Nurhan Awad, 18, sentenced to 13 years imprisonment, and Manar Shweiki, 18, sentenced to 6 years in prison. All three were minors when seized by occupation forces and imprisoned.
A fellow child prisoner among the Palestinian girls is Hadia Ibrahim Arainat, 16, from Jericho, imprisoned since 3 March 2016 and serving a 3-year sentence. Malak al-Ghaliz, 14, is the youngest Palestinian girl prisoner, imprisoned since 20 May 2017, charged with possession of a knife.
The ages of the women prisoners range from 14 to 59 years. The eldest woman prisoner is Ibtisam Mousa, 59, of Gaza, seized on 19 May 2017 as she attempted to cross the Beit Hanoun/Erez crossing – in full possession of a permit from the Israeli occupation – accompanying her sister as she sought treatment for cancer.
The two Palestinian women prisoners serving the longest sentences are Shatila Abu Ayada, 24, from Kufr Qasem and a Palestinian from ’48, and Shurouq Dwayyat, 20, a Palestinian student from Jerusalem. Both are serving 16-year sentences inside Israeli occupation prisons and were subject to massive and highly disparate and unjust sentencing.
There are 11 women prisoners from Jerusalem and 12 from al-Khalil.
Five women are being held under administrative detention:
Palestinian parliamentarian and leftist national leader Khalida Jarrar, 54, was ordered to six months in administrative detention after she was seized by Israeli occupation forces on 2 July. Also ordered to administrative detention was Khitam Saafin, the President of the Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees, jailed for three months without charge or trial after she was seized simultaneously with Jarrar on 2 July.
Sabah Faraoun, 35, from Jerusalem, has been imprisoned without charge or trial under repeatedly renewed detention orders since 19 June 2016. Ihsan Dababseh, 32, was ordered to six months in administrative detention after she was seized by occupation forces on 27 February 2017. Afnan Ahmad Abu Haneya, 21, from Ramallah, was recently ordered to three months in administrative detention.
They are among approximately 500 total Palestinians imprisoned without charge or trial under administrative detention orders, which are indefinitely renewable. Palestinians have routinely spent years at a time jailed under such orders.

Israel Prison Service (IPS) special forces, on Monday morning, raided Ramon prison and assaulted Palestinian detainees, the Palestinian Committee of Prisoners’ Affairs said in a statement.
According to the committee, PNN reports, the Massada and Dror special units, in addition to members of Israeli border police Yamas unit, stormed Section 1 of the prison and “brutally” attacked Palestinian prisoners.
Israeli authorities currently hold over 6,000 Palestinians in Israeli prisons, according to prisoners’ rights group Addameer, including 450 without charge or trial.
According to the committee, PNN reports, the Massada and Dror special units, in addition to members of Israeli border police Yamas unit, stormed Section 1 of the prison and “brutally” attacked Palestinian prisoners.
Israeli authorities currently hold over 6,000 Palestinians in Israeli prisons, according to prisoners’ rights group Addameer, including 450 without charge or trial.

The family of the Palestinian prisoner Bilal Diab, 32, appealed on Sunday to the human rights institutions to speak up for their hunger-striking son in Israeli jails.
Diab’s family said their relative has been on an open-ended hunger strike for the third consecutive week in response to a renewed six-month administrative detention order issued by the Israeli prison authorities with neither charge nor trial.
The family added that Diab has been held in solitary confinement in the Israeli Megiddo lock-up so as to force the detainee to suspend his hunger strike.
On March 1, 2012, Bilal had gone on a 77-day hunger-strike to protest administrative detention in Israeli jail.
Administrative detention is a procedure that allows the Israeli military to hold prisoners indefinitely on allegedly secret information without charging them or allowing them to stand trial, in barefaced contraventions of international laws and standards related to the rights of detainees.
Diab’s family said their relative has been on an open-ended hunger strike for the third consecutive week in response to a renewed six-month administrative detention order issued by the Israeli prison authorities with neither charge nor trial.
The family added that Diab has been held in solitary confinement in the Israeli Megiddo lock-up so as to force the detainee to suspend his hunger strike.
On March 1, 2012, Bilal had gone on a 77-day hunger-strike to protest administrative detention in Israeli jail.
Administrative detention is a procedure that allows the Israeli military to hold prisoners indefinitely on allegedly secret information without charging them or allowing them to stand trial, in barefaced contraventions of international laws and standards related to the rights of detainees.

The Prisoners and Ex-Prisoners Commission received sworn affidavits by Palestinian detainees, among them minors, providing evidence of harsh torture and mistreatment in Israeli detention.
14-year-old Yazen Abu Oudeh, held in the Israeli Ofer lock-up, said he was kidnapped by undercover forces on July 27, 2017, during the clashes that burst out near Beit El checkpoint, in Ramallah. An Israeli gunman hit him with the gun on his head. He was dragged to Benjamin settlement outpost shortly afterwards.
The child added that he had been made to endure heavy beating by the Israeli soldiers on their way to Benjamin outpost via a military jeep, where he had been forced to lie on the ground. The Israelis stepped on his neck with their thigh-high leather footwear.
The minor also stated that he had been subjected to heavy beating during the investigation procedure so as to force confession.
16-year-old Mohamed Taha, kidnapped on July 21, 2017 during clashes in al-Khalil, also said he has been subjected to cruel treatment by the Israeli soldiers.
Taha said he sustained severe head and arm injuries after the Israeli soldiers heavily beat him up. He was later transferred to Hadassah Hospital for treatment but was returned to an Israeli investigation center the following day.
He added that he was still enduring severe pains all over his body as a result of the aggressive blows wrought by the soldiers.
At the same time, Wadi’ al-Ghoul and Ezzedine Amarna, both aged 17, had gone through mistreatment all the way through the questioning phase at al-Jalama penitentiary. They were later transferred to the Israeli Megiddo lock-up.
14-year-old Yazen Abu Oudeh, held in the Israeli Ofer lock-up, said he was kidnapped by undercover forces on July 27, 2017, during the clashes that burst out near Beit El checkpoint, in Ramallah. An Israeli gunman hit him with the gun on his head. He was dragged to Benjamin settlement outpost shortly afterwards.
The child added that he had been made to endure heavy beating by the Israeli soldiers on their way to Benjamin outpost via a military jeep, where he had been forced to lie on the ground. The Israelis stepped on his neck with their thigh-high leather footwear.
The minor also stated that he had been subjected to heavy beating during the investigation procedure so as to force confession.
16-year-old Mohamed Taha, kidnapped on July 21, 2017 during clashes in al-Khalil, also said he has been subjected to cruel treatment by the Israeli soldiers.
Taha said he sustained severe head and arm injuries after the Israeli soldiers heavily beat him up. He was later transferred to Hadassah Hospital for treatment but was returned to an Israeli investigation center the following day.
He added that he was still enduring severe pains all over his body as a result of the aggressive blows wrought by the soldiers.
At the same time, Wadi’ al-Ghoul and Ezzedine Amarna, both aged 17, had gone through mistreatment all the way through the questioning phase at al-Jalama penitentiary. They were later transferred to the Israeli Megiddo lock-up.

Israeli soldiers abducted, earlier Monday, a young Palestinian woman from Sa’ir town, northeast of Hebron, and installed many roadblocks, around the city and nearby towns, in the southern part of the occupied West Bank. The army also installed a roadblock near Jenin.
The Hebron office of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society (PPS) has reported that the soldiers invaded and searched a home in Sa’ir town, and abducted a young woman, identified as Bara’ Mousa al-Kawazba.
The soldiers also invaded many neighborhoods in Hebron city, and the towns of the ath-Thaheriyya, Yatta and Doura, in addition to installing roadblocks at Hebron’s northern road, and the main entrances of Sa’ir and Halhoul towns, before stopping and searching dozens of cars, and interrogated many Palestinians while inspecting their ID cards.
Furthermore, the soldiers installed a roadblock near Haddad Tourism Village, south of the northern West Bank city of Jenin, and detained Nasri Rashed Kamil, 35, for several hours while interrogating him.
The soldiers also stopped and searched dozens of cars, and inspected the ID cards of the passengers.
The Hebron office of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society (PPS) has reported that the soldiers invaded and searched a home in Sa’ir town, and abducted a young woman, identified as Bara’ Mousa al-Kawazba.
The soldiers also invaded many neighborhoods in Hebron city, and the towns of the ath-Thaheriyya, Yatta and Doura, in addition to installing roadblocks at Hebron’s northern road, and the main entrances of Sa’ir and Halhoul towns, before stopping and searching dozens of cars, and interrogated many Palestinians while inspecting their ID cards.
Furthermore, the soldiers installed a roadblock near Haddad Tourism Village, south of the northern West Bank city of Jenin, and detained Nasri Rashed Kamil, 35, for several hours while interrogating him.
The soldiers also stopped and searched dozens of cars, and inspected the ID cards of the passengers.

The Palestinian Prisoners’ Society (PPS) has reported that Israeli soldiers shot and injured, on Monday at dawn, two young Palestinian men Nablus, and abducted two others in Salfit.
Media sources in Nablus said clashes took place after dozens of soldiers, accompanied Israeli settlers’ buses and cars, invaded the eastern area of the city, heading to towards Joseph’s Tomb area.
The added that the soldiers fired many gas bombs and rubber-coated steel bullets, wounding two Palestinians, identified as Amin Mohammad Beitar, 26, and Nidal Jabr Abu Keshek, 24, with rubber-coated steel bullets in the lower back, and chest.
Medics provided the wounded Palestinians with the needed medical attention, and moved them to Rafidia hospital.
In Salfit governorate, in northeastern West Bank, the soldiers invaded Kifl Hares, north of Salfit city, searched several homes and abducted two Palestinians, identified as Nour Abdul-Aziz al-As’ad and Mohammad Abdullah Mousa.
Media sources in Nablus said clashes took place after dozens of soldiers, accompanied Israeli settlers’ buses and cars, invaded the eastern area of the city, heading to towards Joseph’s Tomb area.
The added that the soldiers fired many gas bombs and rubber-coated steel bullets, wounding two Palestinians, identified as Amin Mohammad Beitar, 26, and Nidal Jabr Abu Keshek, 24, with rubber-coated steel bullets in the lower back, and chest.
Medics provided the wounded Palestinians with the needed medical attention, and moved them to Rafidia hospital.
In Salfit governorate, in northeastern West Bank, the soldiers invaded Kifl Hares, north of Salfit city, searched several homes and abducted two Palestinians, identified as Nour Abdul-Aziz al-As’ad and Mohammad Abdullah Mousa.

Israeli soldiers abducted, on Sunday evening and Monday at dawn, seven Palestinian children, including two children, 10 years of age, and summoned one Palestinian for interrogation, in the West Bank governorate of Bethlehem.
The Bethlehem office of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society (PPS) has reported that the soldiers invaded, on Monday at dawn, Teqoua’ town, east of Bethlehem, searched many homes and abducted Mahmoun Ibrahim Al-‘Amour, 15, Mohye Khalil Al-‘Amour, 17, Marwan Kamel al-‘Amour, 17, and Moayyad Abdullah Al-‘Amour, 17.
It added that the soldiers also invaded Doha town, west of Bethlehem, searched homes, and summoned Nader Issa Khatib, 28, for interrogation in Etzion military base and security center.
On Sunday evening, dozens of soldiers invaded Aida refugee camp, north of Bethlehem, violently searched several homes, and abducted three children, identified as Mohammad Rami ‘Oweiss, 10, Abdul-Hamid Abu Srour, 10, and Amro Ahmad Abu Srour.
The three children standing near the eastern entrance of the refugee camp when the army invaded it.
The Bethlehem office of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society (PPS) has reported that the soldiers invaded, on Monday at dawn, Teqoua’ town, east of Bethlehem, searched many homes and abducted Mahmoun Ibrahim Al-‘Amour, 15, Mohye Khalil Al-‘Amour, 17, Marwan Kamel al-‘Amour, 17, and Moayyad Abdullah Al-‘Amour, 17.
It added that the soldiers also invaded Doha town, west of Bethlehem, searched homes, and summoned Nader Issa Khatib, 28, for interrogation in Etzion military base and security center.
On Sunday evening, dozens of soldiers invaded Aida refugee camp, north of Bethlehem, violently searched several homes, and abducted three children, identified as Mohammad Rami ‘Oweiss, 10, Abdul-Hamid Abu Srour, 10, and Amro Ahmad Abu Srour.
The three children standing near the eastern entrance of the refugee camp when the army invaded it.

Israeli soldiers assaulted, Sunday, several young Palestinian men and women near the Al-Aqsa Mosque, especially at the Council Gate and the Chain Gate of the holy site, and abducted twelve of them, but released one later.
Eyewitnesses said the soldiers assaulted many worshippers, especially youngsters, as they were heading to the mosque, and leaving it, during a recreational activity for hundreds of children, dubbed as the “human train.”
They added that dozens of soldiers were deployed in the area, before abducting a young woman, identified as Mayyada Shawamra, in addition to abducting two young men after assaulting them.
The soldiers also sprayed many Palestinians, including guards of the Al-Aqsa Mosque, with pepper spray, and assaulted them before briefly detaining a guard, identified as Omar Rajabi, at a nearby police station.
Furthermore, the soldiers abducted Ala’ Haddad, Moayyad Edrees, Moath Edrees, Ahmad Edrees, Abdullah Badran and Atef Badran.
In addition, the soldiers abducted a young man, identified as Tareq Moayyad Abu Mayyala, near the Council Gate, as he was trying to enter the mosque for evening prayers.
Late on Sunday evening, several Israeli army jeeps invaded Ein al-Louza neighborhood, in Silwan town, near Al-Aqsa Mosque, and fired dozens of rubber-coated steel bullets and concussion grenades, after the soldiers claimed that a car belonging to settlements’ guards was burnt, after Palestinian youngsters hurled a Molotov cocktail at it.
Eyewitnesses said the soldiers assaulted many worshippers, especially youngsters, as they were heading to the mosque, and leaving it, during a recreational activity for hundreds of children, dubbed as the “human train.”
They added that dozens of soldiers were deployed in the area, before abducting a young woman, identified as Mayyada Shawamra, in addition to abducting two young men after assaulting them.
The soldiers also sprayed many Palestinians, including guards of the Al-Aqsa Mosque, with pepper spray, and assaulted them before briefly detaining a guard, identified as Omar Rajabi, at a nearby police station.
Furthermore, the soldiers abducted Ala’ Haddad, Moayyad Edrees, Moath Edrees, Ahmad Edrees, Abdullah Badran and Atef Badran.
In addition, the soldiers abducted a young man, identified as Tareq Moayyad Abu Mayyala, near the Council Gate, as he was trying to enter the mosque for evening prayers.
Late on Sunday evening, several Israeli army jeeps invaded Ein al-Louza neighborhood, in Silwan town, near Al-Aqsa Mosque, and fired dozens of rubber-coated steel bullets and concussion grenades, after the soldiers claimed that a car belonging to settlements’ guards was burnt, after Palestinian youngsters hurled a Molotov cocktail at it.