Kidnapped? Three Jewish Teens Disappear near Hebron in West Bank
TEL AVIV
- Israeli soldiers were searching the West Bank on Friday after three
Jewish teens — one of them an American citizen — vanished in a possible
kidnapping.
An Israel police
spokesman said one of the teens called authorities to say they had been
abducted but did not provide further details, The Associated Press
reported. There was no immediate claim of responsibility.
Israel Defense Forces
told NBC News that they were building roadblocks on the road from Israel
to Gaza with the idea that's where the teens might be taken if they
were abducted.
“We are concentrating
all of our intelligence efforts on trying to track down the missing
individuals," IDF spokesman Brig. Gen. Moti Almoz said in a statement.
The
three youths attended a religious school. They were last seen late
Thursday near the Jewish settlement of Gush Etzion, which is north of
Hebron in the disputed West Bank.
One has U.S. citizenship, NBC News has learned.
Secretary of State John
Kerry spoke with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu about the situation, according to a senior
State Department official.
"We've seen the reports and are very concerned for their well-being," the official said.
"We are working with
the government of Israel and the Palestinian Authority to try to ensure
that the situation is resolved quickly and that the three teenagers are
safely reunited with their families," the official added. "We are giving
this security cooperation our full encouragement."
Netanyahu's office said
he told Kerry that the Palestinian Authority must be held responsible
for the safety of the missing trio.
Adnan al-Dmairi, a spokesman for Palestinian security services in the West Bank, told Reuters the authority had "no knowledge" about the teens' disappearance.
"Three settlers are
missing. Why is this the fault of the Palestinian Authority? We have
nothing to do with this issue. If a natural disaster hits Israel, would
we be responsible? This is mad and unacceptable,'' he said.
Israel Chief Rabbi David Lau said he spoke with family members of the missing students and "heard from them words of hope and prayer ."
"I told them that the Israel people are embracing them and this fact is strengthening them. I'm praying that they receive good news over the course of the Sabbath," Lau said.
HAZEM BADER / AFP - Getty Images
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