Israeli forces launched coordinated invasions across the occupied West Bank on Tuesday, targeting cities and villages in the north, south, center, and northeast. The violations breaking into home, vehicle destruction, and the abduction of civilians, with confrontations reported in multiple areas.
In the southern West Bank, troops stormed the town of Ethna and the city of Hebron, where they assaulted a civilian in the Ar-Ras area, causing bruises and contusions. Several residents and vehicles were detained.
In the Wadi al-Nasara neighborhood, adjacent to the illegal colony of Kiryat Arba, soldiers invaded homes and conducted violent searches.
At the entrance to Al-Fawwar refugee camp, forces smashed parked civilian vehicles behind the camp’s sealed iron gate.
In the northeastern West Bank, Israeli patrols invaded the village of Tayasir, sparking protests moving into the city of Tubas. The governorate continues to face near-daily incursions.
In central Ramallah, troops entered the Ramallah at-Tahta neighborhood, surrounding a UNRWA boys’ school and raiding a residential building amid heavy use of stun grenades and tear gas.
Journalist Hana’ Baydaq, previously abducted by Israeli forces, was brought to the site as her apartment was searched. Media crews were forcibly removed and their work obstructed. Baydaq remains held in the Jalama prison’s interrogation wing, denied access to legal counsel.
In the northern West Bank, forces invaded several villages south of Nablus, including Surra, Yatma, Aqraba, Osarin, Qabalan, and Duma. Homes were invaded and surveillance footage seized, with tear gas and stun grenades deployed.
Separately, in the Jenin area in northern West Bank, Israeli forces abducted Fayez Ahmad Eliat from his home in Deir Abu Da’if following a raid.
Additional homes were targeted, including that of Hassan Mahamid, as armored vehicles spread through the town’s streets.
The invasions form part of a broader escalation of Israeli military activity across the West Bank, marked by intensified raids, property damage, and restrictions on press coverage.