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2 Palestinians die in West Bank clash, 4 wounded in Jerusalem attack

Thousands of Pakistanis on held a rally in Karachi on Sunday in support of Palestinians, as a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas held into a third day. Waving Palestinian flags, demonstrators chanted and held placards reading "We stand with Palestine," "Free Palestine," and "Palestine lives matter." A group of supporters on horseback held Palestinian flags – May 23, 2021

Israeli forces killed two Palestinian teens on Saturday in clashes in the occupied West Bank, Palestinian officials said, and a Palestinian gunman wounded four people in a shooting attack in Jerusalem, Israeli police said.

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Police said the shooter had opened fire at Israeli security forces at a checkpoint at the entrance to Palestinian refugee camp Shuafat on Jerusalem’s outskirts near the West Bank, badly wounding a woman and a security guard.

Two border-police officers sustained mild injuries, and forces were hunting for the Palestinian suspect, police said.

Earlier, the Israeli military said security forces on an operation to arrest a gunman from the Islamic Jihad militant group in the West Bank city of Jenin returned fire at Palestinians who shot and threw explosives at them.

The Palestinian Health Ministry said two Palestinians, aged 16 and 18, were killed and 11 were wounded. Palestinian President Mhamoud Abbas condemned the killings.

The latest in near-daily incursions into Jenin, a militant stronghold, underlined the volatile security climate in the West Bank as Israel heads towards elections on Nov. 1.

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Israel launched its Operation Breakwater against militants on March 31 in response to a string of fatal Palestinian street attacks in Israel.

The surge in violence in the West Bank, where the Palestinian have limited self-rule, has been one of the worst in years with around 80 Palestinians killed, including militants and civilians.

U.N. Middle East envoy Tor Wennesland said he was alarmed by the violence and called for calm.

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U.S.-brokered peace talks aimed at establishing a Palestinian state in the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem, collapsed in 2014 and show no sign of revival.

Israeli security officials have called on Abbas’s Palestinian Authority (PA) to do more to rein in violence.

The PA, increasingly unpopular in the West Bank, says its ability to exert its rule has been systematically undermined by Israel’s incursions.

Abbas’s spokesman, Nabil Abu Rudeineh, said in a statement that Israel’s government was “delusional” in thinking such actions would promote peace and stability.

(Additional reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi in Gaza and Maayan Lubell in JerusalemEditing by Ros Russell, Mark Potter, Nick Macfie and Cynthia Osterman)

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