Israel army razes home of Palestinian attacker in night-long raid

Israeli troops demolished the home of a Palestinian accused of the May killing of a soldier on Saturday, completing a night-long incursion into the Palestinian-controlled city of Ramallah. The raid on the West Bank city where Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas has his headquarters comes as Israeli forces search for the perpetrator of a Thursday shooting that killed two Israeli soldiers. The incursion late Friday triggered clashes with angry residents following a week of rising tensions. Both army and border police units took part in the operation, including members of the commando unit in which the soldier was serving when he was killed by a slab hurled from a building during an army raid. Several hundred soldiers entered the city's Al-Amari refugee camp late Friday, leaving on Saturday morning, AFP journalists reported. "During the operation, dozens of Palestinians instigated a number of violent riots. The rioters hurled rocks towards the forces, who responded with riot dispersal means," the army said. Inside the camp, soldiers demolished the home of Islam Abu Hamid, who was arrested in June for the soldier's killing. The family house was completely destroyed in a controlled explosion, AFP correspondents at the scene said. Neighbours said several hundred residents, including children, were ordered out of their homes and kept in a sports field in the cold of night while the army operation continued. "The weather was very cold. A lot of the elderly, the children and the women were ill," said Samir al-Tukhi, one of those kept outside. - 'We will rebuild' - It is the third time the house has been destroyed, with several of Abu Hamid's brothers also jailed by Israel on terrorism charges, while one was killed. Their mother, Latifa, told AFP the demolition didn't matter to her. "The first time we rebuilt it, the second time we also rebuilt it. One hundred or one thousand times we will rebuild and they demolish it." Israel regularly demolishes the homes of Palestinians who carry out attacks against Israelis. It argues it is a deterrent though critics say it amounts to collective punishment. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has faced pressure from right-wing rivals and Jewish settlers for a strong response to the killing of the soldiers on Thursday. It was the third deadly attack by Palestinian gunmen in the West Bank in two months and set off demonstrations by settler groups on whose support Netanyahu's government depends. In clashes on Friday, Mahmoud Nakhla, 17, was killed by Israeli fire near the Jalazone refugee camp outside Ramallah, the Palestinian health ministry said. The army said on Saturday that an "initial investigation" showed that a soldier opened fire when a Palestinian came toward him in what was seen as a potentially threatening way. "Palestinians instigated a violent riot adjacent to Jalazone," a military spokesman told AFP, adding that troops were pelted with rocks. "During the riot a Palestinian approached a soldier carrying a suspicious object," he said. "In response the soldier fired toward the Palestinian. He was then treated at the scene by troops before being evacuated by a Palestinian ambulance." Israeli troops demolish the home of Islam Abu Hamid, a Palestinian who was arrested for the June killing of a soldier, completing a night-ling incursion into the Palestinian-controlled West Bank city of Ramallah Israeli troops thrust deep inside the Palestinian-controlled West Bank city of Ramallah to carry out the demolition which triggered clashes with angry residents ordered out of their homes in the cold of night Palestinian demonstrators have clashed repeatedly with Israeli troops raiding Palestinian-controlled areas in their search for the perpetrators of a Thursday shooting that killed two soldiers