Israeli forces today shot dead a Hamas member suspected of killing a rabbi as two deadly attacks against Israeli settlers in a month increased tensions in the occupied West Bank.
The Palestinian suspect in the murder of the rabbi on January 9 was shot dead in a pre-dawn raid hours after another Israeli was killed in a stabbing in the West Bank.
Several hundred mourners attended the funeral today for Itamar Ben Gal, the 29-year-old man killed a day earlier who was also a rabbi.
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There was no indication of a direct link between the two attacks, with violence common in the West Bank between Palestinians and Israeli settlers or security forces.
Islamist movement Hamas said the suspect killed overnight was a member of its armed wing. The 19-year-old believed to have committed yesterday's stabbing remained at large.
"The security forces will catch whoever tries to attack Israeli citizens and we will deal with them to the fullest extent of the law," Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said today.
Both attacks have led to Israeli calls for more settlement building in the West Bank, which has been under Israeli occupation for more than 50 years.
Earlier this week in response to the rabbi's murder on January 9, Israel's government in a rare move decided to "legalise" the rogue West Bank outpost where he lived, Havat Gilad, essentially creating a new settlement.
There were further calls for more settlement construction at today's funeral for Ben Gal held at the Har Bracha settlement where he lived, Israeli media reported.
The overnight raid occurred in the village of Yamoun near Jenin, where the 22-year-old suspect, Ahmad Jarrar, was said to be hiding.
It came after a weeks-long manhunt for Jarrar, the son of a Hamas figure killed by Israeli forces during the second intifada of the early 2000s.
Beginning late yesterday and into early today, dozens of Israeli army jeeps entered Yamoun and besieged a part of the town. Heavy clashes broke out with live fire, according to a Palestinian security source.
Israel's Shin Bet domestic security agency said that "during the attempted arrest, the terrorist came out of a building where he was hiding armed.
"Security forces fired in his direction. An M-16 assault rifle and a bag containing explosives were found near his body," it said.
Hamas's armed wing, the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, claimed Jarrar as a member and welcomed the attack on January 9 that saw Raziel Shevach, 35, shot dead.
It said a "Qassam bullet" was responsible for the murder, though it was unclear if the Hamas leadership was claiming direct responsibility for the attack or whether the cell acted on its own.
Israeli forces had been hunting for the assailants since the murder, with roadblocks and checkpoints set up following the attack.
Two Palestinians were killed during earlier raids which Israeli security services said were launched to find Shevach's killers.
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