Judea and Samaria saw more than 500
Palestinian terrorist attacks each month on average in the first half of
2024, according to figures Rescuers Without Borders (Hatzalah Judea and
Samaria) published on Thursday.
In the first six months of this year,
first responders recorded 3,272 acts of terrorism in the region,
including 1,868 cases of rock-throwing, 456 attacks with Molotov
cocktails, 299 explosive charges and 109 shootings.
Palestinian terrorists have killed 14
people and wounded 155 others in Judea and Samaria since the start of
the year, according to the group.
Though the number of terrorist incidents
recorded in Judea and Samaria saw a slight decrease compared to the
first six months of 2023, the number of deadly incidents rose, Rescuers
Without Borders said.
Rescuers Without Borders’s figures do not
include the hundreds of violent attacks on Israeli security personnel
occurring during ongoing counterterrorism operations in Arab towns under the control of the Palestinian Authority.
Rescuers Without Borders was founded in 2000, at the beginning of the Second Intifada, with
the goal of establishing an emergency response infrastructure in Judea
and Samaria. Eventually, the organization expanded the scope of its
operations to include all of Israel.
The organization released its biannual
report on Palestinian terrorism amid another wave of attacks throughout
Judea and Samaria.
On Wednesday morning, an Israeli man was seriously wounded in a combined shooting and stabbing attack at the Okfim Junction on the Route 60 highway near Kiryat Arba, on the outskirts of Hebron in Judea.
The previous day, Israeli troops foiled a terrorist attack close
to the Beit Einun Interchange near Hebron. Troops killed the terrorist
after he tried to stab them, the army said. No Israeli casualties were
reported.
Last week, three Israel Defense Forces soldiers were wounded in a terrorist shooting on Route 55 close to Nabi Ilyas in western Samaria. First responders said the attack was carried out from a passing vehicle.
The Jewish population in
Judea and Samaria has surpassed half a million people, according to
research published earlier this year. There were 502,991 Jews living in
Judea and Samaria as of Jan. 1, according to the report, which culled
data from Israel’s Interior Ministry.
The Jewish population living beyond the
1967 line accounts for 12% of all Jews in Israel. The report projected
the population in the region to exceed 600,000 by 2030, 700,000 by
2035 and one million by 2047.
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