'Palestinians kill Israeli couple in West Bank shooting'

The couple's children, aged four months to nine years old, were lightly injured in the shooting yesterday and taken to hospital, an Israeli security source said.

Jerusalem: Palestinian gunmen have shot dead an Israeli couple travelling in a car with their four young children in the occupied West Bank, the Israeli army said, vowing reprisals for the "barbaric attack" amid a spike in tensions.

The couple's children, aged four months to nine years old, were lightly injured in the shooting yesterday and taken to hospital, an Israeli security source said.

The victims were named as Eitam and Naama Henkin, both in their 30s and residents of the central West Bank settlement of Neria, near Ramallah.

They "were massacred right in front of their four children," Israeli army spokesman Peter Lerner said in a statement.

"The army has launched an operation to find those responsible for this heinous and barbaric attack," he added.

The incident took place between the Jewish settlements of Itamar and Elon Moreh, near the Palestinian city of Nablus.

A group of young Israeli settlers, some hooded, gathered later at the scene of the attack and threw stones at passing Palestinian vehicles, according to Israeli television.

Israeli Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon said in a statement that the security forces "will spare no efforts to arrest the killers and their sponsors."

Israeli security forces flooded the sector where the incident occurred, an AFP journalist saw.

The attack came after court documents showed Israel was considering authorising wildcat settlement outposts in the West Bank near a village where a firebombing in July killed an 18-month-old Palestinian boy and his parents.

The international community regards all Jewish settlements in the West Bank as illegal, but the Israeli government makes a distinction between those it has authorised and those it has not.

The shooting also came after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu offered in a speech at the UN General Assembly to resume direct peace talks with the Palestinians.

The premier said he was prepared to "immediately resume direct peace negotiations" without preconditions, although the Palestinians condition a resumption of dialogue on an end to settlement building and the release of prisoners.

On Wednesday, Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas told the Assembly Israel's refusal to release prisoners and stop settlement activity meant the Palestinians could not be bound by past agreements between the two sides.

"The time for talking (with the Palestinians ) is over," Israeli Education Minister Naftali Bennett thundered in a statement following yesterday's attack.

"It is time to act," he added, saying that "people whose leaders support the murder will never be a state."

 

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