Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Palestinian killed after opening fire on Israeli troops near Hebron

The shooter, identified by Palestinian media as Hamdi Abu Dia, an officer in the P.A. security services, was likely responsible for two other recent attacks, according to the IDF.

The weapon used by a Palestinian gunman who was shot dead during an exchange of fire with Israel Defense Forces troops in Judea, Jan. 17, 2023. Credit: IDF.
The weapon used by a Palestinian gunman who was shot dead during an exchange of fire with Israel Defense Forces troops in Judea, Jan. 17, 2023. Credit: IDF.

Israeli troops killed a Palestinian gunman on Tuesday during an exchange of fire near the town of Halhul, just north of Hebron, according to the Israel Defense Forces.

The shooter, identified by Palestinian media as Hamdi Abu Dia, 40, a member of the Palestinian Authority security services, had opened fire on the soldiers, the IDF said in a statement.

No Israeli casualties were reported.

Abu Dia published a will online prior to Tuesday’s attack, in which he states that he is sacrificing in the name of Islam, according to Palestinian media reports.

Reports said that he published a will online before Tuesday’s attack, in which he said he was sacrificing in the name of Islam.

According to the IDF, Abu Dia was likely responsible for two shootings over the past 48 hours, including Sunday’s targeting of a bus carrying Israelis along the Route 60 highway in Judea.

Nobody was injured in the incident, although the bulletproof vehicle sustained damage.

That attack came just hours after two Palestinian terrorists were killed while carrying out a drive-by shooting against soldiers near Jaba, five miles southwest of Jenin in Samaria.

In a report delivered to the U.N. Security Council, the board says the terrorist organization’s refusal to give up its weapons remains “the principal obstacle to full implementation” of the Gaza ceasefire.
The new measure “addresses all of these forms of hate in one comprehensive bill and serves to be enacted by Congress as soon as possible,” stated Rabbi A.D. Motzen, of Agudah.
The U.S. secretary of state cited “overwhelming support” for a U.S.-Bahrain resolution demanding Tehran halt attacks and remove sea mines from the strategic waterway.
“At their core, sanctions are not acts of aggression,” Scott Bessent said at an annual terrorism funding conference. “They are instruments of peace.”
Prosecutors said that he tried to bring a man, who was hiding under luggage in the back of a vehicle, into the United States through a border crossing.
The Philadelphia Police Department said that the suspect entered a child’s bedroom before a neighbor intervened.