Israeli soldiers killed two Palestinians and wounded more than 90 others on Saturday in the Occupied Territories.
The Palestinian news agency, WAFA, reported that Ribhi Al Bayedh, 50, was killed by Israeli tank fire in the West Bank city of Hebron.
Israeli tanks shelled PA areas in the city, injuring a number of Palestinians there, WAFA said.
Earlier, a Palestinian youth was shot dead at the border of the Jewish settlement of Kfar Darom in the Gaza Strip.
Khalil Yusef Fayad was shot in the head.
According to AFP, a total of about seventy-seven Palestinians were wounded in the morning alone, in multiple confrontations between Israeli troops and stone-throwing youths in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.
Another Palestinian died of wounds he sustained last week in Rafah.
The Palestinian news agency, WAFA, said that Ahmed Mohammed, 24, was shot in the head last Thursday.
Seven Palestinians were killed and more than 70 others were wounded on Friday during clashes with the occupation troops in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
The escalation in the Occupied Territories came despite an agreement Wednesday between Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres and Palestinian President Yasser Arafat to implement a ceasefire.
On Friday night, WAFA reported that three Palestinians were killed and three injured, two seriously, in a mysterious explosion in Rafah.
Palestinian security officials were quoted by the Tel Aviv-based Haaretz newspaper as saying that they were looking into the possibility that the three killed were laying an explosive to be detonated near Israeli troops.
The Israeli army said that the three were on their way to place an explosive device.
Earlier Friday evening, an Islamic Jihad activist, Yasser Al Nadhimi, 30, was killed in southern Hebron, apparently while he was preparing an explosive device, said the paper.
The circumstances of his death are still unclear, and Palestinian security forces have begun investigating the incident, it added.
Also in Hebron, Palestinians and Israeli troops reportedly exchanged fire, during which one Palestinian was killed.
According to the paper, Palestinians detonated three explosive devices near Israeli army troops in the Bethlehem area Friday.
One of the explosions took place next to the West Bank village of Khadr, in PA-controlled Area A.
The Israeli army returned fire, killing a 17-year-old Palestinian, Haaretz said, adding that a ten-year-old Palestinian boy was also killed during clashes with Israeli troops at a neighboring village.
Thousands of Palestinians demonstrated after Friday prayers in several towns in the territories, including at the Ayosh Junction, north of the West Bank city of Ramallah.
Demonstrations also took place in Gaza and Khan Yunis, where hundreds of people chanted anti-occupation slogans.
At the Muntar Junction in Gaza, Palestinian demonstrators threw rocks at an Israeli army outpost.
PALESTINIAN LEADERSHIP ACCUSES ISRAEL OF ‘REFUSING’ CEASEFIRE
The Palestinian leadership accused Israel late Friday of "refusing" international efforts to consolidate a Mideast ceasefire and returning to its military escalation in the Occupied Territories, in a statement published by WAFA.
"The ceasefire calls for urgent measures on the part of Israel to end its military escalation, immediately lift its military, security and economic blockade of the territories, withdraw its tanks and roadblocks," the leadership said in a statement after its weekly meeting chaired by Palestinian President Yasser Arafat.
The first anniversary of the Palestinian Intifada on Friday was marked by one of the bloodiest days in the fighting, as seven Palestinians were killed and more than 70 injured in an explosion of rage against the 34-year Israeli occupation of Palestinian land conquered in 1967.
The leadership, which also includes Palestinian lawmakers and the executive of the Palestine Liberation Organization, also accused Israel of resisting international efforts to restore calm in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
"The repeated military escalation indicates a [rejection] by the Israeli government [of] the international efforts," it said.
It charged, amid Friday's violence, that Israel wants to scupper a very shaky ceasefire in place since September 18, as well as a tentative peace accord signed by Arafat and Peres on Wednesday.
"This escalation took place in the context of a military tactic aimed at causing the failure of every agreement in the ceasefire, notably the one between Chairman Arafat and Shimon Peres," the statement said.
Meanwhile, Haaretz reported that the Israeli defense establishment would carry out a "security re-assessment" later Saturday, in light of the recent violent confrontations in the West Bank and Gaza Strip between Palestinians and Israeli troops.
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon will convene his security cabinet Saturday night to discuss “Palestinian breaches of the ceasefire,” Israel Radio reported, cited by the paper.
The report added that decisions would be made at the meeting on the government's ongoing ceasefire policy.
Senior diplomatic officials expressed outrage Saturday over the refusal by the Palestinian Authority to arrest suspected terrorists, despite agreements reached at a ceasefire meeting Wednesday between Peres and Arafat, the paper said.
Mohammed Dahlan, head of Palestinian preventive security in the Gaza Strip, said that there had also been no agreement reached on the subject at a joint Israeli-Palestinian security committee meeting held Friday under the auspices of a CIA representative, and that the Palestinians were only required to take the measures outlined in the cease-fire document brokered by CIA Director George Tenet, it said.
Dahlan added that no Palestinian on the list of 108 suspects handed over to the PA would be arrested, and reiterated that only those Palestinians who broke Palestinian law would be apprehended.
According to Israeli media reports, Peres demanded that Arafat order the arrests of 10 suspected terrorists considered to be "walking time bombs," within 48 hours of Wednesday's meeting, and that he order the arrests of 48 suspected terrorist "commanders" believed to be responsible for allegedly planning “terrorist attacks” and planting car bombs, within one week.
Israeli troops have killed more that 640 Palestinians since the latest uprising began in September 2000.
Among those killed by the occupation forces have been around 100 children, as reported by Amnesty International in the first few months of the Intifada.
Human rights groups have identified a consistent pattern of Israeli troops using lethal force on demonstrators in situations in which the occupation forces were in no immediate danger - Albawaba.com
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