Israel detains 37 more Palestinians in West Bank crackdown

Arrests come as search for three teenagers missing for almost two weeks continues

Israel's army said today it had detained another 37 Palestinians as it searched for three missing teenagers and extended a crackdown on the Hamas Islamist group it accuses of kidnapping them.

There were no reports of clashes between the soldiers and Palestinians in the raids in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, where the military says it has detained 361 people since the Israeli students went missing on June 12th.

The crisis has aggravated tensions in the West Bank which, along with East Jerusalem and the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, the Palestinians want as part of a future state.

An Israeli military spokeswoman said the latest operations took place in Jenin, a militant stronghold, and in the Hebron area, close to where the three disappeared while hitchhiking.

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“As part of ongoing operations, (Israeli) forces detained 37 suspects and searched 80 locations,” the spokeswoman said.

Palestinian officials said Israeli soldiers also entered Bethlehem and Nablus.

The disappearance of the students - Gil-Ad Shaer and US-Israeli dual national Naftali Fraenkel, both aged 16, and Eyal Yifrah, 19 - after they left a Jewish settlement where they were studying has been celebrated by Hamas. But it has stopped short of taking credit.

"We don't have any information about the missing three soldier-settlers," Hamas supreme leader Khaled Meshaal was quoted as saying by Palimes, a website aligned with the group.

“If indeed there was a capture, those who did it must be saluted.”

Hospital officials in the West Bank said four Palestinians have been killed during clashes with Israeli forces since the search for the teenagers began.

The kidnapping of the three teens and subsequent arrests have put pressure on a unity pact between Hamas and Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas. Israel has urged the Western-backed leader to scrap the agreement.

Mr Abbas has condemned the kidnappings and his security forces have been helping in the search - cooperation that has stirred anger among Palestinians.

“The security coordination is a catastrophe,” Mr Meshaal said.

But Mr Abbas has also called the Israeli sweeps "collective punishment" and his Palestinian Authority has sought to convene the UN Security Council to try to end the incursions.

Hamas has called for Israel’s destruction, although various officials have at times indicated a willingness to negotiate a long-term ceasefire.

The United States and the European Union classify Hamas as a terrorist group and shun contact with it unless it recognises Israel, renounces violence and accepts past interim peace accords.

Reuters