For the tenth day Palestinians demonstrate near the separation fence east of Gaza

For the tenth day Palestinians demonstrate near the separation fence east of Gaza

For the tenth day in a row, Palestinian youth continue to demonstrate near the fence separating the Gaza Strip and Israel. While the young men lit rubber tires, the occupation army deployed its forces to disperse them.

Dozens of Palestinian youth demonstrated on Tuesday, for the tenth day in a row, near the fence separating the Gaza Strip and Israel.

The demonstrators lit used rubber tires, raised the Palestinian flag on the separation fence, and threw sound bombs.

The demonstrations come at the call of young men who call themselves “Rebel Youth,” “denouncing the settlers’ storming of Al-Aqsa Mosque, the ongoing violations in the West Bank, and the continued siege of Gaza.”

The demonstrations include launching incendiary balloons towards Israeli cities and towns adjacent to the Gaza Strip, which could cause fires in agricultural fields.

The Israeli occupation army deployed its forces, vehicles, and snipers behind the nearby sand hills to disperse the demonstrations in the eastern regions of the Strip.

In recent days, the Palestinian Ministry of Health announced the death of a young man during the demonstrations and dozens of injuries and suffocation cases as a result of their dispersal by Israeli forces.


Dozens of settlers stormed Al-Aqsa Mosque on Monday, according to the Islamic Endowments Department in Jerusalem, as some of them performed “Talmudic prayers.”

Israel imposes a siege on the Gaza Strip, which has resulted in a significant deterioration in economic and living conditions.

Since last year, the West Bank has also witnessed a state of severe tension following the Israeli army’s incursions into Palestinian cities and camps.




After two rounds of clashes, Palestinian security deployment in Ain al-Hilweh camp in Lebanon


Joint Palestinian security forces deployed in the Ain al-Hilweh Palestinian refugee camp in Sidon, southern Lebanon, after two bloody rounds of fighting that left 32 dead and more than 150 wounded.


Today, Tuesday, members of the Joint Palestinian Security Force began deploying in the "Ain al-Hilweh" refugee camp in southern Lebanon, in implementation of the terms of the ceasefire agreement reached between the "Fatah" movement and Islamic factions.

The Lebanese News Agency reported that the joint “Palestinian Security Force” began its deployment this afternoon at two points: the first, “Al-Fawqani Street” of the Ain al-Hilweh camp, the Tira neighborhood, and the second at the Buraq Central - Bustan al-Quds Junction.


The agency explained that the deployment of the security force "comes following a ceasefire reached after the second round of fighting between the Fatah movement and Islamic groups inside the camp, which resulted in 18 dead and dozens wounded."

The agency pointed out that "the deployment of the security force came after it was strengthened and supplied with about 70 officers and members as a first stage, provided that the process continues gradually, bringing its number to 170 members at all points."

She pointed out that "the force was formed from various Palestinian national and Islamic forces based on the decisions of the Joint Palestinian Action Authority in the Sidon region."


On September 14, the Palestinian factions reached a ceasefire agreement, after a week of clashes that caused a large wave of displacement out of the camp.

At the end of last July, clashes broke out between members of "Fatah" and an armed group calling itself "Muslim Youth", resulting in the killing of 14 people, including the commander of the Palestinian National Security in the Sidon region, Brigadier General Abu Ashraf Al-Armushi, a leader of the "Fatah" movement, with 4 of his companions. This marked a turning point in the clashes that resulted in 32 deaths and more than 150 wounded.

Ain al-Hilweh camp is one of the largest Palestinian camps in Lebanon, along with 11 other camps, as the number of Palestinian refugees in the country is estimated at about 300,000.


The Lebanese army or security forces do not enter the camps according to previous implicit agreements, leaving the task of maintaining security there to the Palestinians themselves, while the Lebanese army imposes strict measures around them.




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