Israeli occupation forces launched a campaign of raids and incursions into various areas of the West Bank at dawn on Saturday, including arrests and assaults.
In Nablus, Israeli occupation forces arrested three Palestinian youths after storming the Rafidia neighborhood and Balata al-Balad in central and eastern Nablus, in the northern West Bank.
Palestinian sources reported that Israeli forces stormed Balata al-Balad, east of Nablus, and arrested two brothers after raiding their homes.
In the Rafidia neighborhood of the city, these forces arrested a third youth after raiding a residential building.
Israeli occupation forces also stormed the eastern neighborhood of Jenin with several military vehicles, raiding and searching several homes, and arresting a young man from his home after searching it.
Israeli occupation forces raided the town of Burqin, west of Jenin, and arrested a young man.
They also kidnapped the father and two brothers of a resistance fighter. The aggression on Jenin and its camp has continued for 125 days, leaving 40 martyrs and hundreds of detainees.
On a daily basis, enemy forces carry out raids, accompanied by arrests, in various areas of the West Bank.
In addition, on Saturday, settlers destroyed fruitful olive trees near Yatta, south of Hebron.
Osama Makhamreh, an activist in the resistance to settlement activity in Yatta, reported that settlers broke several fruitful olive trees in the Hawara area, east of Yatta.
Makhareh indicated that the olive trees belong to Muhammad Ibrahim al-Adra, and that the vandalism by settlers from the Karmiel settlement and the Shimon outpost also affected a fence surrounding the land.
Settler attacks against citizens and their property have escalated in the West Bank, coinciding with the genocidal war waged by the enemy army in the Gaza Strip for more than 19 months.
According to the Wall and Settlement Resistance Commission, settlers carried out 341 attacks against Palestinians and their property in the West Bank during April and attempted to establish 10 settlement outposts.