Jenin - Saba:
The Zionist enemy continues its aggression on the city and camp of Jenin for the fourth day in a row, which resulted in the martyrdom of 12 Palestinian citizens and the injury and arrest of dozens, and great destruction to the infrastructure and property of citizens.
Jenin Deputy Governor Mansour Al-Saadi said in press statements that the occupation forces closed the four entrances to the city of Jenin and its camp with earth mounds, and prevented entry and exit from it.
Al-Saadi touched on the difficult conditions facing patients and medical staff at Jenin Governmental Hospital, in light of the power and fuel supplies being cut off as a result of the occupation's aggression.
He added that the ongoing occupation aggression included airstrikes and raids carried out by the occupation army, in addition to forcing hundreds of citizens to flee the camp.
In a related context, local sources reported that the occupation forces burned homes belonging to the Masharqa family in Jenin camp, and prevented civil defense crews from reaching the site to extinguish the fire.
The sources added that the family fled their homes on Wednesday, while an elderly woman living on the ground floor of the home of citizen Walid Masharqa was unable to flee due to her health condition and her inability to walk long distances, as she appealed to the family to evacuate immediately.
The occupation forces also forced the family of citizen Ahmed Abu Al-Haija to evacuate their home on Mahyoub Street in the camp, and turned it into a military barracks.
The occupation imposed a curfew on the citizens inside the camp after forcing hundreds of families to leave their homes under threat of arms and by force, and opened a single passage through which citizens were forced to pass through cameras to check their eye and face prints, until they reached the Return Roundabout west of the camp, and imposed a tight siege on it and closed its entrances, amid threats to demolish and bulldoze a number of homes.
The occupation forces cut off electricity to Jenin camp and large parts of its surroundings, which led to power outages in Jenin Governmental Hospital and Ibn Sina Hospital, and prevented the electricity company crews from working to repair the network.
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