NABLUS: Major Zionist raids Tuesday in the occupied West Bank targeting nascent resistance group "the Lions' Den" killed six Palestinians, whose deaths brought thousands of mourners onto the streets in mass funerals. The Palestinian health ministry said five people were killed in Nablus in the northern West Bank, where the Zionist entity confirmed an overnight operation targeted the group, which it blames for multiple recent attacks.

Another Palestinian died from a gunshot wound to the chest during overnight clashes with Zionist forces in Nabi Saleh, north of Ramallah, the health ministry said. Zionist Prime Minister Yair Lapid said in a statement that Wadi Al-Houh, whom he described as "the head" of the Lions' Den, was among those killed in Nablus. The army said it had carried out a major operation with police and intelligence officers targeting a location "used by the main operatives" of the group, describing the site as a "headquarters and a workshop for making weapons".

"The forces detonated the explosive manufacturing site," added the army statement, which did not provide a death toll. "During the activity, multiple armed suspects were hit." Later Tuesday, a Zionist civilian was stabbed by an attacker who fled the scene to Al-Funduq, a Palestinian village west of Nablus, the army said, adding that troops were searching the area. Medics from Magen David Adom, the Zionist entity's equivalent of the Red Cross, identified the victim as a 55-year-old man in moderate condition.

A Zionist military official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told AFP that "after trying to let the Palestinian Authority contain the group and them failing to do so, and with the rise in attacks... we embarked on an intelligence-based operation to halt the Lions' Den terror attacks". "The region has been thoroughly reinforced, we're prepared for an escalation," the official added. On the death reported at Nabi Saleh, the army said it had "spotted a suspect throwing an explosive device" at soldiers, who opened fire.

In a statement posted to Telegram, the militant group was defiant. "Surrender is the path of humiliation," it said. "It's time for the lions to come out of their den." A sea of mourners carried bodies through the streets of Nablus ahead of the burials as gunman fired into the air. Violence has surged in recent months in the north of the West Bank - the Palestinian territory occupied since 1967 by the Zionist entity - especially in the areas of Nablus and Jenin.

More than 100 Palestinian fighters and civilians have been killed since the start of the year, the heaviest toll in the West Bank for nearly seven years, according to the United Nations. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is making "urgent contacts in order to stop this aggression against our people" in Nablus, his spokesman Nabil Abu Rudeinah said in a statement.

The chief of Islamist armed group Hamas, Ismail Haniya, warned in a statement that the violence would "plunge Palestine into escalation". Palestinian factions in the Zionist-blockaded Gaza strip announced a general strike. Khaled Al-Batsh, a leader in the Palestinian Islamic Jihad group, urged "confrontation" with the Zionist entity on all "fronts". Islamic Jihad reported its fighters were involved in "violent clashes" with Zionist forces in Nablus, and threatened the Zionist with reprisals "for its crimes".

In recent weeks, a group of young Palestinian fighters - some affiliated with groups such as Fatah, Hamas and Islamic Jihad-have launched militant attacks from Nablus. The Lions' Den claimed responsibility for a deadly attack on a Zionist soldier two weeks ago in the West Bank. Late leader Ibrahim Al-Nabulsi, nicknamed "The Lion of Nablus", was known for galvanizing the youth before he was shot dead by Zionist forces in August. He has since become a folk hero to Palestinians on social media.

In the aftermath, the Zionist army tightened its grip on Nablus, setting up controls to identify people leaving the city and constantly scanning the area with observation drones. On Saturday night, a Lions' Den fighter, Tamer Al-Kilani, was killed in Nablus by an "explosion" attributed by the group and the Zionist press to a bomb remotely activated by the Zionist army. The army did not comment on the claims. - AFP