HEBRON // Israeli soldiers killed a 14-year-old Palestinian in the occupied West Bank on Friday as they pressed a crackdown on the Islamist movement Hamas in their search for three missing teenagers.
Troops also wounded two Palestinians in a refugee camp just outside Jerusalem, as clashes flared during the massive military operation in which forces have detained 330 Palestinians over the past week.
Israel accuses Hamas of kidnapping two 16-year-olds and a 19-year-old who went missing at a hitch-hiking stop in the West Bank, an allegation the Islamist group has dismissed.
But Israel seized on the opportunity to drive a wedge between Hamas and the Palestinian leadership, who formed a joint administration for the West Bank and Gaza Strip just this month for the first time in seven years.
Palestinian security and medical sources said 14-year-old Mohammed Dudin was shot in the chest in a clash that erupted after Israeli soldiers arrived to conduct arrests in the village of Dura, south of the West Bank city of Hebron.
Dudin was taken to the Alia hospital in Hebron, where he was pronounced dead.
The army said villagers had thrown stones and Molotov cocktails at troops on an arrest mission in Dura, and that soldiers responded with live fire.
Istraeli troops also shot and wounded two young Palestinians in Qalandia refugee camp just north of Jerusalem.
Mustafa Aslan, 20, was in critical condition at Hadassah hospital in Jerusalem while Mohammed Shehada, 21, was being treated in the West Bank city of Ramallah, medics said.
The Palestinian prime minister Rami Hamdallah, the head of the new unity government, attended weekly prayers in Hebron later on Friday, but the army prevented him from attending Dudin’s burial in Dura.
Hamas, which refuses to recognise Israel, has lashed out at the Palestinian Authority led by President Mahmoud Abbas for its decision to maintain security coordination with Israel despite the wave of searches and arrests.
The Palestinian foreign minister Riyad Al Malki on Friday accused Israel of an “exaggerated” response, and questioned Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s assertion that Hamas was behind the abduction.
“He cannot keep blaming one side without showing evidence,” Mr Al Malki said.
“Three kids have disappeared, but in exchange for that the Israeli army has taken 300 Palestinians,” he said. “Their reaction went beyond logic.”
He added, however, that “if it comes to be known that Hamas is behind it [the kidnapping], then of course the unity government will be at risk”.
Hamas has not confirmed or denied accusations that it was behind the abduction. Some of its officials have warned of an intifada if the Israeli raids continue.
Mr Al Malki said the Palestinian Authority was committed to peace.
“I can assure you that as long as President Abu Mazen is in charge, there will be no third intifada,” he said, referring to Mr Abbas.
The Israeli defence minister Moshe Yaalon said Israel’s “working assumption” was that “the abductees are alive, until proven otherwise”.
Mr Netanyahu met the families of the three missing teenagers for the first time on Friday afternoon in Jerusalem, assuring them the operation’s “chief objective is to find the boys”, his office said.
Israeli troops also carried out search and arrest operations overnight in the Dheisheh refugee camp, near Bethlehem, and in Arura, north of Ramallah, “detaining some 25 suspects and searching approximately 200 locations”, the army said.
Troops were faced with “sporadic confrontations” in the form of “rocks, explosives and flammable devices” and responded to “the life-endangering threat with live fire”, it said.
Since the start of the operation last week, troops have “scanned about 1,150 locations in search for the abducted boys and for terror elements”.
“Approximately 330 suspects were detained, out of which 240 [are] terrorists associated with Hamas,” the army said.
Overnight, the Israeli military also carried out a series of air strikes in the Gaza Strip in retaliation for rocket fire at southern Israel late on Thursday, wounding six people, four of them children, Palestinian medics said.
* Agence France-Presse