An Israeli soldier shot and killed a Jewish man he suspected was a
Palestinian "terrorist" in Jerusalem, police said on Thursday, in a
reflection of the jittery mood that has gripped Israelis amid a spate of
near-daily Palestinian stabbing attacks.
Police spokesperson
Micky Rosenfeld said soldiers deployed in Jerusalem to reinforce police
demanded
late on Wednesday that the man show them his ID. The man
refused, scuffled with the soldiers and then attempted to seize one of
their weapons. One soldier shot the man, who later died of his wounds,
Rosenfeld said.
"The soldiers had high suspicions that he was a
terrorist," he said. Israeli media said the man had asked for the
soldiers' IDs first, but Rosenfeld was not able to confirm that detail.
He said the incident is under investigation.
The Palestinian
attacks have Israelis on edge. When an Arab citizen of Israel opened
fire at a bus station in southern Israel on Sunday, killing an Israeli
soldier and wounding several people, a private security guard shot an
Eritrean migrant he thought was an attacker. As the Eritrean lay on the
ground, a mob of people cursed him, kicked him and hit him with objects.
He later died of his wounds. Earlier this month, an Israeli man stabbed
a Jew after mistaking his dark-skinned victim for an Arab.
Stabbing attacks
Israelis
have scrambled to purchase pepper spray for self-defence and some
public officials have called for citizens to carry firearms for
protection, part of a growing sense of public panic.
Israel has
beefed up security across the country, sending hundreds of soldiers to
back up thousands of police officers. In Jerusalem, police have erected
concrete barriers and checkpoints at the entrance to Arab areas of east
Jerusalem, where many of the attackers are from.
The violence has
continued unabated. Police say two Palestinians stabbed an Israeli at a
bus stop on Thursday after they tried to board a bus ferrying children
to school. Police shot and wounded the two men. Rosenfeld said the
attackers, from a West Bank village, were seriously wounded, and the
Israeli man was lightly wounded.
Ten Israelis have been killed
over the last month, mainly in stabbing attacks. On the Palestinian
side, 47 people have been killed, 26 of them identified by Israel as
attackers, the others killed in clashes with Israeli forces.
Grim assessment of prospects
The
violence erupted a month ago, fuelled by rumours that Israel was
plotting to take over a sensitive Jerusalem holy site revered by both
Jews and Muslims. The violence was initially confined to traditionally
Arab east Jerusalem but soon spread deep into Israel, the West Bank and
the Gaza Strip.
The Palestinians say the violence is rooted in
frustration at decades of living under Israeli occupation, while Israel
accuses Palestinian leaders of inciting the unrest.
Diplomatic
efforts have kicked off in a bid to quell the violence. The UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon met with Israeli and Palestinian leaders
during a visit to the region this week and then offered the Security
Council a grim assessment of prospects for defusing the violence.
Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu travelled to Germany on Wednesday,
where he met with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and is set to meet US
Secretary of State John Kerry. Kerry is scheduled to meet Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas in Jordan this weekend.
Thursday, October 22, 2015
Israeli soldier kills Jewish man mistaken for 'terrorist'
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