Security forces arrest suspects in settler rampage described as 'pogrom'

Police say they expect to make more arrests during their ongoing investigation into settler violence in and around Huwara; 'Lawful people don't sow terror among the (civilian) population,' says IDF general

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Israeli security forces overnight Wednesday arrested another six West Bank settlers suspects over a rampage in the Palestinian town Huwara earlier this week, which an Israeli general described as a "pogrom."
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  • A Palestinian gunman killed two Israeli brothers on Sunday as they were driving in the West Bank, prompting attacks by Israeli settlers on houses and cars during which one Palestinian was killed, officials say.
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    האחים הלל מנחם ז"ל ויגל יעקב ז"ל
    האחים הלל מנחם ז"ל ויגל יעקב ז"ל
    Hillel and Yigal Yaniv
    Israeli police said on Wednesday they expected to make more arrests during their ongoing investigation into the settler violence in and around Huwara, a Palestinian village where the two Israeli brothers from a nearby settlement were shot dead.
    Major General Yehuda Fuchs, who commands the Israeli military in the area, said his forces had prepared for attempted settler retribution but had been surprised by the intensity of the violence, which he said was perpetrated by dozens of people.
    "The incident in Huwara was a pogrom carried out by outlaws," he told N12 News late on Tuesday.
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    הרס בחווארה
    הרס בחווארה
    The village of Huwara after settler attacks
    (Photo: Ido Erez)
    A 'pogrom' is a mob attack, often approved by authorities, against a religious, racial, or national minority. The term is usually applied to attacks on Jews in the Russian Empire in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

    Political Tensions

    Fuchs' comments came amid increased tensions within the nationalist-religious government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, which includes hard-line settlers demanding tough action against Palestinian attacks.
    One of them, far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, has called on people "not to take the law into their own hands", while his Jewish Power party has accused Netanyahu of being weak on terrorism.
    "This is not 'taking the law into your own hands,' because lawful people don't sow terror among the (civilian) population," said Fuchs. "Collective punishment doesn't help to combat terrorism, on the contrary, it might even cause terrorism."
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    כוחות צה"ל בחווארה
    כוחות צה"ל בחווארה
    IDF troops at Huwara
    (Photo: AFP)
    With the Muslim holy month of Ramadan and the Jewish Passover festival weeks away, foreign mediators have sought to tamp down tensions that surged after a spate of deadly Palestinian street attacks and lethal Israeli military raids.
    "I'm worried," said U.S. Ambassador Tom Nides at Tel Aviv University's conference of the Institute for National Security Studies late on Tuesday.
    "This is going to be a very complicated period of time we're about to walk into, we've got to keep things as calm as possible to keep things from getting out of control, which could easily happen," said Nides.
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