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Two sisters killed in West Bank shooting were British nationals

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Two women killed when their car was shot at and rammed in the West Bank were British nationals.

The women were sisters – one aged 15 and the other in her 20s, local media reported.

Their mother was also seriously injured in the attack near the Hamra settlement, about 30 miles north of Jerusalem.

Friday’s shooting happened after Israeli war planes hit Lebanon and Gaza – in response to rocket attacks Israel blamed on militant group Hamas.

Tensions are high in the region following police raids on Al Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem this week.

Sky News Middle East correspondent Ali Bunkall said it’s believed the victims of the attack moved to Israel around 2005.

The sisters’ mother was airlifted to hospital in a “very critical condition”, he added.

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Pictures from the scene in the Jordan Valley show several cars badly damaged on the side of the road.

Their father was behind in another car when the attack happened, according to Oded Revivi, the mayor of a settlement near Bethlehem where they lived.

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Clashes at Al Aqsa mosque

Bunkall said the targeting of cars with Israeli number plates in the West Bank had become “far more commonplace in the last few weeks”.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and defence Minister Yoav Gallant visited the site of the shooting late on Friday.

“It’s just a matter of time, and not much time, until we settle the score,” Mr Netanyahu said.

Road blocks have been set up to try to find the attackers.

No group has claimed responsibility, but a Hamas spokesman hailed the attack as “retaliation for the crimes committed by Israel in the West Bank and the Al-Aqsa mosque”.

A UK Foreign Office spokesperson said in a statement: “We are saddened to hear about the deaths of two British-Israeli citizens and the serious injuries sustained by a third individual.

“The UK calls for all parties across the region to de-escalate tensions’

Tension on the streets as religious festivals coincide

Jerusalem has been calm today, but you can feel the tensions on the streets. Israeli security officials have bolstered numbers, especially in the Old City.

This weekend sees the convergence of Ramadan, Passover and Easter – the internal intelligence agencies had marked it as being a potential flashpoint.

The salvo of missiles from southern Lebanon into northern Israel yesterday afternoon came as a surprise. For a few hours, it had the potential to be a major escalation.

Not since 2006 has such an attack happened on Israel but the airstrikes overnight were carefully calibrated to avoid further violence.

Israeli forces hit the launch sites and in areas not controlled by Hezbollah.

Likewise, the simultaneous strikes in Gaza attacked known Hamas military posts but didn’t cause casualties.

Having said that, it wouldn’t take much to spark more violence. In previous years, violence has often escalated in the second half of Ramadan.

Jews, and other religions, are prevented from entering Al Aqsa between Friday and Sunday. When the compound opens up again, it might be a moment for more clashes.

The killing of two young British sisters in the West Bank is the latest tragedy in a new trend of Palestinian militant violence.

Cars with Israeli number plates have been increasingly targeted, sometimes fatally, as was the case in this incident.

Hamas, and Gaza, is a known quantity – you can read the signs and it often follows a pattern.

What is harder to predict are acts by unaffiliated Palestinians acting alone and how that might light the flame under this tinderbox.

The clashes at Jerusalem’s Al Aqsa compound came at the start of the Jewish festival of Passover, which this year crosses over with Ramadan.

The site is extremely sacred to both Muslims and Jews and tensions over access and control often spill over into violence.

Read more:
Why is there tension over Jerusalem holy site?

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Israel strikes targets in Lebanon and Gaza

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Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile system intercepted many of the rockets

Israel’s Friday morning airstrikes hit different areas of Gaza, including tunnels and weapons-making sites of Hamas – the group that controls the blockaded coastal strip.

Hamas targets in southern Lebanon were also attacked, according to Israel’s military.

There were no reports of serious injuries following the Israeli strikes, but the Palestinian Health Ministry said a children’s hospital in Gaza had been damaged.

Israel said its retaliation followed 34 rockets fired from Lebanon on Thursday – one of the heaviest such attacks since its 2006 war with Hezbollah.

Authorities said 25 of the rockets fired at Israel were intercepted by air defences.

Most of those that made it into Israeli territory hit open areas, but a house was hit by shrapnel when one landed in the town of Sderot.

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