Palestinian Authority refuses tax revenues from Israel The Palestinian Authority said it would refuse to accept tax revenues from Israel following the latter's decision to deduct sums Palestinians pay to prisoners, as Israel arrested two high-profile Palestinians in Jerusalem and the West Bank on Wednesday.

RAMALLAH, West Bank -- The Palestinian Authority on Wednesday said it rejected its regular monthly tax transfer from Israel to protest an Israeli decision to deduct sums of money the Palestinians pay to the families of people killed, injured or imprisoned for attacks on Israel.

Also on Wednesday, Israel arrested two high-profile Palestinians in Jerusalem and the West Bank.

Hussein al-Sheikh, the Palestinian official who coordinates the Palestinian Authority's communication with Israel, announced the rejection of the tax transfers.

Israel announced last week that it would withhold over $138 million in revenue to penalize the Palestinian leadership for paying stipends to Palestinian attackers and their families.

Under interim peace deals, Israel collects customs duties and other taxes on behalf of the Western-backed Palestinian Authority, and transfers the funds to the Palestinians each month. These transfers cover roughly two-thirds of the Palestinian government's budget.

The freeze of the funds was expected to deal a dire financial blow to the cash-strapped Palestinian leadership, already weakened by the recent U.S. cuts of more than $200 million in bilateral aid. The authority expects it won't be able to pay its employees' full salaries.

Israel says the stipends to prisoners' families encourage violence. Palestinians describe the payments as an important form of social welfare and say they are responsible to all of their citizens.

Although the rejection of the funds is likely to hurt them, the Palestinians are hoping that the move will put pressure on Israel to reverse course. A collapse of the Palestinian Authority could lead to the end of security cooperation with Israel, and theoretically force Israel to assume responsibility over the more than 2 million Palestinians in the West Bank.

Also in Ramallah, the seat of the Palestinian Authority, Israel's Shin Bet security service arrested a well-known Palestinian for "severe and current terrorist activity."

Zakaria Zubeidi rose to fame during the second Palestinian uprising in the early 2000s, and later ran the militia affiliated with Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah party. For years, Zubeidi was on Israel's "most wanted" list before being granted amnesty.

A decade later, Zubeidi leads a very different life as manager of prisoner affairs for the Palestinian Authority, founder of a local theater company and student of political science at Birzeit University. His relatives contend he has long abstained from militant activity.

The sudden arrest baffled Palestinian analysts, prompting suspicions that Israel was leveraging Zubeidi's past infamy to score political points as national elections approach.

Meanwhile in Jerusalem, Israeli police arrested a top Palestinian official, along with one other, under suspicion of fraud and forgery.

Adnan Ghaith, the Palestinian Authority governor of Jerusalem, was arrested in an overnight raid. The police did not immediately elaborate on the charges.

The arrests come at a time of escalating tension in Jerusalem and the West Bank. Unrest between Palestinian protesters and Israeli police erupted last week around the Al-Aqsa Mosque, long a flashpoint in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Palestinian worshippers re-opened a building in the sacred compound that has been closed by Israeli court order for over a decade, staging prayer-protests inside several times over the past week. In response, Israel arrested dozens of east Jerusalem residents suspected of inciting violence and briefly detained the head of the Islamic authority that oversees Muslim holy sites in Jerusalem.

Kobi Michael, a senior research fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies, said there is "no doubt" that the timing of the upcoming Israeli elections in April plays a role in the apparent mounting troubles between Israel and Palestinians.

"The situation is very sensitive and very fragile right now," said Michael. "It looks like the tension that has been building up here might explode."