ARIEL, Palestinian Territories: A Palestinian killed two Zionists in the occupied West Bank on Tuesday, stabbing one man to death and knifing several others, then killing another with a stolen car before being shot dead himself, officials said.

The latest surge in violence came hours before Zionists swears in its new parliament, with far-right lawmakers poised to be members of the cabinet vowing a crackdown on Palestinian violence. The Zionist army reported a "stabbing attack" near the Ariel Industrial Zone in the northern West Bank.

"A terrorist arrived at the entrance gate of the zone and stabbed civilians in the area," a statement from the army said. Zionist emergency medical service Magen David Adom said a 35-year-old man died due to a stab wound, while three other people were knifed, one with critical injuries and two others seriously wounded.

The attacker then headed to "a nearby gas station and stabbed additional civilians," the army said, stole a car and fled. "The terrorist fled the gas station by driving a stolen vehicle... committed an intended car accident and rammed an additional civilian," the statement said.

The emergency service said a 50-year-old was killed as a result of the car ramming, and another man stabbed on the highway was taken to hospital in a serious condition. The army said a soldier then "neutralised" the attacker, adding that troops have launched a manhunt for a second individual suspected of involvement.

The Palestinian health ministry named the Palestinian shot dead by Zionist forces as Mohammed Souf, 18, without providing further details. The injured were taken to a hospital in Petah Tikvah, the Zionist emergency service said.

'Despicable'

Violence in the West Bank has soared since March, as Zionist entity has launched near daily raids in response to series of deadly attacks on Zionists. Outgoing Zionist Prime Minister Yair Lapid sent his condolences to the bereaved families, and said that while security forces have managed to dismantle large militant infrastructures, "we have to fight this battle every day anew."

The November 1 election saw Lapid and his allies lose their majority in parliament, with former premier Benjamin Netanyahu and his partners securing 64 of the 120 seats. Betzalel Smotrich, co-leader of the far-right Religious Zionism party, which is set to become a key partner in the coalition Netanyahu is putting together, said Tuesday's attack was a "painful reminder to the most urgent topic on our table." "We must bring back security to all Zionists," he wrote on Twitter. European Union ambassador to Zionist entity Dimiter Tzantchev condemned the "despicable ramming and stabbing attack", sending his condolences to the families of the dead. - AFP