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Palestinian teenager shot dead.

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Palestinian health ministry says killing ‘part of a series’ of ‘field executions carried out by the occupation forces’. 

Israeli forces shot a Palestinian teenager dead near Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank and in a separate incident Israeli forces injured around 90 people protesting near Nablus against the confiscation of Palestinian flags by Jewish settlers.

At least one Palestinian was shot in the leg and dozens of other protesters sustained injuries from stun grenades, rubber-coated bullets and tear gas inhalation during clashes in the West Bank town of Huwara, near the city of Nablus, the Palestine Red Crescent Society said on Friday.

Videos posted on social media earlier this week showed Jewish settlers and Israeli soldiers taking down Palestinian flags in the town. On Friday, Palestinians organised a march of people waving flags.

“What is happening in Huwara is a provocation by the settlers,” Mohammad Abdelhameed, a Huwara council member, told Reuters.

“We hang the Palestinian flag, which is a symbol of our identity and it will remain raised as long as we are on this land,” he said.

Israeli law does not ban the Palestinian flag, but police and soldiers regularly remove Palestinian flags from public areas.

Condemning the Israeli forces’ violence as “repression”, the Palestinian Foreign Ministry said in a statement that locals were protesting against expanding Jewish settlements and the confiscation of Palestinian land.

The Israeli military did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

It was not clear whether the slain teenager was involved in the stone-throwing.

For many Palestinians, the march is a blatant provocation and a gross violation of one of the few places in the city, increasingly hemmed in by Jewish development and settlement, that retains a strong Palestinian identity. Legal efforts to ban the march have failed.

Hamas, the Palestinian resistance movement that governs the Gaza Strip, has said they are ready for confrontation if the Israeli government does not keep the march out of Muslim neighbourhoods on Sunday.“They can avoid a war and escalation if they stop this mad [march],” Bassem Naim, a senior Hamas official, told Reuters in Gaza this week.

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Palestinian health ministry says killing ‘part of a series’ of ‘field executions carried out by the occupation forces’. 

Israeli forces shot a Palestinian teenager dead near Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank and in a separate incident Israeli forces injured around 90 people protesting near Nablus against the confiscation of Palestinian flags by Jewish settlers.

At least one Palestinian was shot in the leg and dozens of other protesters sustained injuries from stun grenades, rubber-coated bullets and tear gas inhalation during clashes in the West Bank town of Huwara, near the city of Nablus, the Palestine Red Crescent Society said on Friday.

Videos posted on social media earlier this week showed Jewish settlers and Israeli soldiers taking down Palestinian flags in the town. On Friday, Palestinians organised a march of people waving flags.

“What is happening in Huwara is a provocation by the settlers,” Mohammad Abdelhameed, a Huwara council member, told Reuters.

“We hang the Palestinian flag, which is a symbol of our identity and it will remain raised as long as we are on this land,” he said.

Israeli law does not ban the Palestinian flag, but police and soldiers regularly remove Palestinian flags from public areas.

Condemning the Israeli forces’ violence as “repression”, the Palestinian Foreign Ministry said in a statement that locals were protesting against expanding Jewish settlements and the confiscation of Palestinian land.

The Israeli military did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

It was not clear whether the slain teenager was involved in the stone-throwing.

For many Palestinians, the march is a blatant provocation and a gross violation of one of the few places in the city, increasingly hemmed in by Jewish development and settlement, that retains a strong Palestinian identity. Legal efforts to ban the march have failed.

Hamas, the Palestinian resistance movement that governs the Gaza Strip, has said they are ready for confrontation if the Israeli government does not keep the march out of Muslim neighbourhoods on Sunday.“They can avoid a war and escalation if they stop this mad [march],” Bassem Naim, a senior Hamas official, told Reuters in Gaza this week.

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