
Tulkarm - (Saba):
Israeli enemy forces detained hundreds of Palestinian citizens at the entrances to the Tulkarm and Nur Shams refugee camps on Friday as they attempted to evacuate their belongings from their homes threatened with demolition, despite prior permission.
The Palestinian News Agency reported that enemy forces pursued Palestinian citizens in the vicinity and at the entrances to the camps, randomly and heavily firing live ammunition and sound bombs, resulting in journalist Ruwa Dridi being injured by shrapnel in the foot. She was subsequently transferred to the hospital, where her condition was described as minor.
The enemy forces also took dozens of young men to field interrogation centers established within the camps. They also arrested photojournalist Fadi Yassin from his home near the Bilal Mosque in the vicinity of Tulkarm camp, specifically in the area adjacent to the Rabaya neighborhood.
In a related context, signs hung by enemy forces at the entrances to Tulkarm camp read: "No Entry - Closed Military Zone," in a clear attempt to enforce isolation and impose a military fait accompli on the ground.
Despite the difficult conditions on the ground, a large crowd of citizens participated in a popular rally in Gamal Abdel Nasser Square in Tulkarm, rejecting the systematic policy of the enemy targeting, burning, bombing, and demolishing hundreds of residential units in Tulkarm and Nur Shams camps.
The vigil was called for by the national action factions and popular committees in the two camps. Participants emphasized their categorical rejection of the occupation's destructive plans, their adherence to the right of return to their homes, and their steadfastness on their land, as they continue their journey back to the lands from which they were displaced in 1948.
Yesterday evening, Thursday, the enemy forces notified the demolition of 106 buildings and homes in the two camps within 24 hours, including (58) buildings in Tulkarm camp and (48) homes in Nur Shams camp. This comes at a time when the ongoing aggression against them, which has lasted for 96 days, has led to the forced displacement of more than 4,200 families from the Tulkarm and Nur Shams camps, comprising more than 25,000 citizens. The destruction of 396 homes has been complete and 2,573 homes have been partially destroyed, in addition to the closure of their entrances and alleys with earth mounds.
Israeli enemy forces detained hundreds of Palestinian citizens at the entrances to the Tulkarm and Nur Shams refugee camps on Friday as they attempted to evacuate their belongings from their homes threatened with demolition, despite prior permission.
The Palestinian News Agency reported that enemy forces pursued Palestinian citizens in the vicinity and at the entrances to the camps, randomly and heavily firing live ammunition and sound bombs, resulting in journalist Ruwa Dridi being injured by shrapnel in the foot. She was subsequently transferred to the hospital, where her condition was described as minor.
The enemy forces also took dozens of young men to field interrogation centers established within the camps. They also arrested photojournalist Fadi Yassin from his home near the Bilal Mosque in the vicinity of Tulkarm camp, specifically in the area adjacent to the Rabaya neighborhood.
In a related context, signs hung by enemy forces at the entrances to Tulkarm camp read: "No Entry - Closed Military Zone," in a clear attempt to enforce isolation and impose a military fait accompli on the ground.
Despite the difficult conditions on the ground, a large crowd of citizens participated in a popular rally in Gamal Abdel Nasser Square in Tulkarm, rejecting the systematic policy of the enemy targeting, burning, bombing, and demolishing hundreds of residential units in Tulkarm and Nur Shams camps.
The vigil was called for by the national action factions and popular committees in the two camps. Participants emphasized their categorical rejection of the occupation's destructive plans, their adherence to the right of return to their homes, and their steadfastness on their land, as they continue their journey back to the lands from which they were displaced in 1948.
Yesterday evening, Thursday, the enemy forces notified the demolition of 106 buildings and homes in the two camps within 24 hours, including (58) buildings in Tulkarm camp and (48) homes in Nur Shams camp. This comes at a time when the ongoing aggression against them, which has lasted for 96 days, has led to the forced displacement of more than 4,200 families from the Tulkarm and Nur Shams camps, comprising more than 25,000 citizens. The destruction of 396 homes has been complete and 2,573 homes have been partially destroyed, in addition to the closure of their entrances and alleys with earth mounds.