Israelis and Palestinians wounded in West Bank shootings
Palestinians opened fire at Israeli Jews who snuck into an occupied West Bank city to visit a shrine, wounding two of them, the Israeli army and medical sources said.
The incident in Nablus was followed by an unrelated Israeli military raid nearby in which four Palestinians were shot.
The army said the earlier shooting happened when "a number of civilians entered Nablus".
The Israelis were headed to Joseph's Tomb, believed to be the last resting place of the biblical patriarch Joseph, a flashpoint for violence in the West Bank, and revered as a holy site.
The Israeli army secures monthly pilgrimages to the tomb, but prohibits civilians entering on their own.
"While they were there, they were shot and wounded," the army said, adding that soldiers "entered the city to rescue them."
The vehicle of the Israelis was torched by Palestinians, a reporter said, with the situation in the city remaining tense hours after the event.
Two men were wounded and were being treated in hospitals in central Israel, a spokeswoman for the Rabin medical centre and a spokesman for Sheba hospital said.
Israel has occupied the West Bank since the Six-Day War of 1967, when it seized the territory from Jordan.
The Palestinian Red Crescent Society said its medics treated four people for gunshot wounds.