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Slain Palestinian toddler’s parents, brother fighting for lives

JALAZON REFUGEE CAMP, Palestinian Territories: The parents and brother of a Palestinian toddler burned to death by suspected Jewish extremists were fighting for their lives on Saturday, as protests over the arson attack entered a second day.The firebombing of the family’s home in the occupied West Bank, which killed 18-month-old

By our correspondents
August 02, 2015
JALAZON REFUGEE CAMP, Palestinian Territories: The parents and brother of a Palestinian toddler burned to death by suspected Jewish extremists were fighting for their lives on Saturday, as protests over the arson attack entered a second day.
The firebombing of the family’s home in the occupied West Bank, which killed 18-month-old Ali Saad Dawabsha, sparked an international outcry over Israel’s failure to get to grips with violence by hardline Jewish settlers.
The child’s father, Saad, was being treated for third-degree burns at the Soroka hospital in southern Israel, where a spokeswoman described his condition as “critical”.
Mother Riham and four-year-old brother Ahmed were being treated at Tel Hashomer hospital near Tel Aviv, where a spokeswoman described their condition as life-threatening.
The family’s small brick and cement home in the village of Duma was gutted by fire, and a Jewish Star of David spray-painted on a wall along with the words “revenge” and “long live the Messiah”.
That was indicative of so-called “price tag” violence — a euphemism for nationalist-motivated hate crimes by Jewish extremists.
Palestinian protesters took to the streets across the West Bank, including Israeli-annexed east Occupied al-Quds, triggering clashes with the Israeli army.
On Saturday, dozens of Palestinians were clashing with Israeli forces at the Jalazon refugee camp, where the funeral of Laith Khaldi had taken place.
Khaldi, 16, was shot by Israeli soldiers on Friday after throwing a Molotov cocktail, the army said.
Hundreds participated in his funeral, with some men firing in the air with automatic rifles as the body was being taken from the mosque to the cemetery.
“I spent years raising him, and now I am so angry,” his mother, Samar Khayatt, told AFP. “He is happy now; he’s a martyr and he’s next to God, but I am very angry.”