Naftali
Frankel, Gil-ad Sha'er and Eyal Yifrach were kidnapped while hitchhiking back
from their religious schools
theguardian.com,
Peter Beaumont in Jerusalem, Monday 30
June 2014
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| An Israeli woman holds a sign showing images of the Israeli teenagers at a rally in Tel Aviv on Sunday. Photograph: Baz Ratner/Reuters |
The bodies
of three missing Israeli teenagers, including one with US citizenship, have
been found close to the southern West Bank city of Hebron.
A senior
spokesman for the Israel Defence Force, Lt Col Peter Lerner, told the Guardian
that soldiers and civilian volunteers came across "two bodies buried under
a pile of rocks" at about five pm on Monday afternoon in a field between
Halhoul and a neighbouring village.
"Digging
deeper they came cross a third body." The source added that the identities
of the bodies had not be confirmed nor was there any information on the state
of the bodies at present to suggest when they had been killed.
He added:
"The families have been informed about the discovery and we will release
more details when it is available."
The three,
Eyal Yifrach, 19, and Gil-ad Sha'er and Naftali Frankel who were both 16, went
missing while hitchhiking back from their religious schools in settlements on
the West Bank, prompting claims from the Israeli government that they had been
kidnapped by the militants from the Islamist organisation Hamas.
Israel has
named two Hamas members from the Hebron area as suspects, but despite the
arrest of some 400 Palestinians, the two men remained on the run on Monday.
Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was meeting with his Security Cabinet late on
Monday to discuss Israel's response to the discovery of the bodies amid a
period of increased rocket fire from Gaza and retaliatory airstrikes by Israel.
The case
prompted a massive manhunt by soldiers, police, civilians and members of
Israel's domestic intelligence agency Shin Bet.
Binyamin
Proper, who was among the civilian volunteers that found the bodies, told
Channel 2 TV that a member of the search party "saw something suspicious
on the ground, plants that looked out of place, moved them and moved some rocks
and then found the bodies. We realised it was them and we called the
army."
The hunt
for the three missing youths has galvanised Israeli society, prompting round
the clock coverage and large rallies – the most recent in Tel Aviv on Sunday –
calling for their release.
As the
search went on, concerns mounted for the teenagers safety amid pointed and grim
reminders in the Israeli media that West Bank kidnapping victims historically
had often been killed shortly after their abduction.
Early
reports on social media and elsewhere suggested the bodies had been found in a rocky
gully close to Halhul a town at the entrance to Hebron, a city of 750,000,
although that could not immediately be confirmed.
However
reports suggested that the access to the area had been sealed by military
roadblocks.
The
abduction of the three youths has become a heated political issue both on the
domestic and international political front, with Palestinian leaders accusing
the Israeli government of using it as an excuse to smash the new Palestinian
unity government backed by Hamas.
However,
even within Palestinian circles cross to President Mahmoud Abbas, concerns had
been growing over the potential fallout that would follow the revelation the
teenagers had been kidnapped or killed by militants associated with, or member
of, Hamas with one official telling the Guardian the unity government would be
dead in the water.
In
Washington, White House spokesman Josh Earnest said, "We obviously condemn
in the strongest possible terms violence that takes the lives of innocent
civilians."
n a statement
issue by his office British prime minister David Cameron said: "I am
deeply saddened by the news that the bodies of the three Israeli boys kidnapped
on 12 June have been found this evening. This was an appalling and inexcusable
act of terror perpetrated against young teenagers. Britain will stand with
Israel as it seeks to bring to justice those responsible."
Related Articles:
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Discovery of body raises suspicions, ire in east Jerusalem
#Palestine and #Israel are killing each others children and have dreams for peace ? Injustice and peace cannot coexist @CBC @CTVToronto
— asma Mahmood (@asmaAmahmood3) July 2, 2014
Related Articles:
Murdered Palestinian teenager's family says new footage shows his abduction (+Video)
Violent clashes as Palestinians demand justice after teenager's body found
Discovery of body raises suspicions, ire in east Jerusalem


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