Kuwait Times

Truck attack kills 4 Israeli soldiers

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A Palestinia­n rammed a truck into a group of Israeli soldiers visiting a popular tourist spot in Jerusalem yesterday, killing four and wounding 17 others, authoritie­s said. The driver was also killed at the location overlookin­g holy sites such as the Dome of the Rock and providing one of the most spectacula­r views of Jerusalem. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu alleged the attacker “supported” the Islamic State group, though he provided no details on what led to the finding.

Chaos broke out at the scene when the truck ploughed through the crowd, with hundreds of soldiers having arrived there as part of a tour for troops about the history of Jerusalem. “A lone terrorist drove his truck into a group of soldiers standing on the side of the road,” police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld told reporters at the scene. “They got off the bus, and as they were getting off the bus and getting organized, he took advantage.”

After claims from some that soldiers were slow to react, Israel’s military distribute­d a video of one of its troops saying he shot after realizing it was not an accident. “An investigat­ion is underway but this

attack lasted several seconds and once the soldiers understood that it was an attack, they fired in the direction of the vehicle,” army spokesman Moti Almoz said in a statement. Multiple bullet holes could be seen in the windshield of the truck.

Israel’s military said four soldiers were killed and 17 wounded. Medics reported that three of the dead were women, while all four were in their 20s. Video said to be of the incident being shared online shows a flatbed truck with a crane in the rear drive through a group of soldiers standing next to a bus. The driver then pulls off to the side and tries to reverse back towards where the soldiers were hit before the truck eventually comes to a stop.

The video showed visitors, including soldiers, running for cover as the incident began. Bodies were later covered in sheets. “I heard my soldiers screaming and shouting,” said one of the tour guides, Lea Schreiber. “I saw a truck that went on the side of the road. Soldiers starting shooting... There were orders and screaming everywhere. They told them to hide behind the wall because there was fear of another attack.” Netanyahu later visited the scene. “We know the identity of the assailant, who according to all indication­s supported IS,” he said in a statement released by his office.

Fawzi Barhum, a spokesman for Islamist movement Hamas which runs the Gaza Strip, calling the attack “heroic and brave”. Palestinia­n security officials said the driver was a Palestinia­n in his late 20s from the east Jerusalem neighborho­od of Jabal Mukaber, located close to the scene. Palestinia­n media named him as Fadi Al-Qanbar, a father of four. Rosenfeld said it was not yet clear if the attack had been planned earlier or was spontaneou­s.

It occurred in what was formerly designated a no-man’s land between mainly Palestinia­n east and Israeli-dominated west Jerusalem, near UN headquarte­rs at a spot that leads to a promenade with picturesqu­e views. Israeli settlement­s in east Jerusalem and Palestinia­n neighborho­ods are located nearby. The European Union condemned the attack, as did the UN envoy for the Middle East peace process, Nickolay Mladenov. “It is reprehensi­ble that some choose to glorify such acts which undermine the possibilit­y of a peaceful future for both Palestinia­ns and Israelis,” he said. “There is nothing heroic in such actions.” Many analysts say Palestinia­n frustratio­n with the Israeli occupation and settlement-building in the West Bank, comatose peace efforts and their own fractured leadership have helped feed the unrest. Israel says incitement by Palestinia­n leaders and media is a leading cause.

The status of Jerusalem is one of the most difficult issues in the conflict. The Palestinia­ns see east Jerusalem, which Israel occupied in 1967 and later annexed, as the capital of their future state. Israel views the whole city as its capital. US President-elect Donald Trump recently stirred fresh controvers­y over Jerusalem’s status by vowing to break with years of precedent and move the US embassy there from Tel Aviv. Last week, Palestinia­n president Mahmoud Abbas warned doing so would cross a “red line” and could jeopardize peace prospects.

 ?? — AFP ?? JERUSALEM: The covered bodies of Israeli soldiers lie on the ground as security forces and emergency personnel gather at the site of a vehicle-ramming attack yesterday.
— AFP JERUSALEM: The covered bodies of Israeli soldiers lie on the ground as security forces and emergency personnel gather at the site of a vehicle-ramming attack yesterday.

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