The bullet casings clinked and chimed gently as the children cleared up and their glum parents surveyed the extent of the damage inflicted on their property.
The 50 members of the extended family, who all live in apartments in the same building, returned to their homes yesterday morning after Israeli forces withdrew the night before. The three-day operation, codenamed Home and Garden, was the largest Israeli offensive in the occupied West Bank in two decades, involving airstrikes and up to 2,000 ground troops.
"The soldiers forced everyone into one room while they searched the house. Then they made us go outside, and they used a shoulder-launched rocket to fire into the house. There were no resistance youths here," said the family patriarch, Hussein, 68.
Twelve Palestinians, at least four of whom were combatants, and one Israeli soldier were killed in the intense fighting, which the army said targeted an important militant command centre in the slum-like neighbourhood of Jenin city.
On the second day of Home and Garden, another nine people were wounded in Tel Aviv after a Palestinian attacker ran down pedestrians with his car and stabbed people. In Jenin, the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) denied accusations that soldiers had shot and injured people gathered in the courtyard of a hospital, although the hospital director confirmed to the Guardian the incident had taken place, and four people were injured by live ammunition.
The violence spiralled further overnight on Tuesday, when five rockets were launched from the blockaded Gaza Strip. All of the fire was intercepted. Israel responded by striking what it said were two weapons-making sites operated by the Hamas militant group.
Denne historien er fra July 06, 2023-utgaven av The Guardian.
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Denne historien er fra July 06, 2023-utgaven av The Guardian.
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