Israeli forces clash with Palestinian protesters supporting hunger strikers

Israeli forces clash with Palestinian protesters supporting hunger strikers
At least six people were injured on Thursday after clashes erupted in the West Bank during a rally in support of Palestinian hunger strikers in Israeli jails.
2 min read
11 May, 2017
Six protesters were wounded by Israeli fire at a West Bank demonstration [AFP]
Clashes erupted in the occupied West Bank on Thursday between Israeli soldiers and hundreds of Palestinians protesting in support of hunger strikers in Israeli jails, leaving at least six people wounded.

Six protesters were wounded by Israeli fire at a West Bank demonstration, the Palestinian Health Ministry said.

The protesters sustained leg injuries from low caliber bullets fired by Israeli forces after some Palestinians threw rocks. 

Israeli forces also fired water canon containing foul-smelling liquid, AFP reported.

The clashes broke out at a checkpoint at the entrance to Ramallah near the Israeli settlement of Beit El, the site of regular demonstrations against the occupation.

The protest was called in support of hundreds of Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike in Israeli jails since April 17.

"We are entering an extremely critical period" for the hunger strikers, Qadura Fares, head of the Palestinian Prisoners Club, said earlier at a rally in Ramallah.

"A large number of prisoners can no longer move from their bed or take care of their basic needs."

The Red Cross visited the leader of the hunger strike, Marwan Barghouti, on Thursday for the first time since it began.

An ICRC spokesman was unable to provide an update on his health "in accordance with the principles of medical confidentiality".

The ICRC had been allowed access to other prisoners on hunger strike, but Israel had been restricting access to Barghouti.

Hunger strikers have issued a list of demands including better medical services, family visits and more dignified detention conditions.

Barghouti, a senior member of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah party and a highly popular figure among Palestinians, is serving five life sentences over his role in the second Palestinian intifada, or uprising.

Earlier this week, Israel produced footage they claimed showed him secretly breaking his fast in his cell.

His wife Fadwa rejected the footage as fake, saying it was "intended to break the morale of prisoners".