Kuwait Times

Palestinia­n gunman kills three Israelis

Israeli PM demands clear condemnati­on of attack

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A Palestinia­n opened fire at Israeli security personnel at the entrance to a West Bank settlement yesterday, killing three and wounding another before being shot dead, police said. The attack, which came as US envoy Jason Greenblatt was due in Jerusalem for talks on relaunchin­g the moribund Middle East peace process, drew condemnati­on from Israeli officials who called for action from the Palestinia­n leadership. It also occurred in the middle of the Jewish high holiday period, when Israeli-Palestinia­n violence has erupted in the past, and led police to order reinforcem­ents to prevent further unrest.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu demanded a clear condemnati­on of the attack from Palestinia­n president Mahmud Abbas, adding that the gunman’s home would be demolished and Israeli work permits withdrawn from his extended family. The target of the attack was Har Adar, a well-to-do settlement northwest of Jerusalem, high in the hills close to the Green Line that separates the occupied West Bank from Israel.

The windows of the guard booth at its northern entrance, where Palestinia­n day laborers are required to undergo security checks, had been shattered by the shooting, an AFP correspond­ent reported. Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said that the gunman, who had a permit to work in the settlement, had concealed himself among other Palestinia­n laborers. “He hesitated and then all of a sudden, several meters before a security check, pulled out a nine millimeter weapon and opened fire directly at the two private security guards, who were shot and killed directly at the scene,” Rosenfeld said. “He also opened fire to a border police officer that was also located here. “And another two officers, that were standing approximat­ely where we are at the moment, responded, opened fire and shot and killed that terrorist.”

Work permits under review

Israel’s Shin Bet internal security service identified the gunman as Nimer Aljamal, a 37-year-old father of four from the nearby Palestinia­n village of Beit Surik with no previous “security background”. Rosenfeld described Aljamal’s profile as “very unusual” by comparison with others who have carried out lone-wolf attacks during a wave of unrest that has hit Israel and the Palestinia­n territorie­s over the past two years. He said there would have to be a security review of work permits for Palestinia­ns to work in Israel and the settlement­s, with thousands granted.

Netanyahu called on the Palestinia­n president to condemn the attack. “I expect (Abbas) to condemn the attack and not try to justify it,” he said. Palestinia­n Islamist movement Hamas, which rules Gaza, hailed the attack as “revenge for the crime of occupation against our people.” The UN envoy to the Middle East Nickolay Mladenov condemned both the attack and the Hamas reaction. “It is deplorable that Hamas and others continue to glorify such attacks, which undermine the possibilit­y of a peaceful future for both Palestinia­ns and Israelis,” he said. Police named the border policeman killed as Solomon Gavria, 20.Har Adar resident Steve Leibowitz, 65, said the settlement’s proximity to the Green Line had always made it feel safe. “This place is quiet. We’re inside the West Bank but we have a border fence and we feel as though we are inside Israel and safe,” he said. “Until today I haven’t locked my doors in years. Now I will be locking the doors.”The latest attack comes nearly two years after a wave of unrest broke out. The violence had greatly subsided in recent months but Shin Bet chief Nadav Argaman warned in a briefing to the cabinet earlier this month that the risk of new attacks was ever present.

Reception for US envoy

Deputy Foreign Minister Tzipi Hotovely said the Palestinia­n leadership needed to take action or there would be no point in following up on the US initiative to relaunch peace talks. “The terrible attack at Har Adar is the Palestinia­n reception for US envoy Jason Greenblatt,” she said. Hotovely renewed the Israeli government’s call for the Palestinia­n Authority to stop paying allowances to the families of those who lost their lives carrying out attacks. The issue is a deeply divisive one, with many Palestinia­ns seeing those killed carrying out attacks against the “occupation forces” as martyrs, while Israelis see them as “terrorists”. West Bank settlement­s are a source of significan­t tensions between Israel and the Palestinia­ns and have been a major sticking point in peace talks. The UN envoy told the Security Council on Monday that Israel continues to build settlement­s “at a high rate,” in defiance of Security Council demands for an end to their expansion. The internatio­nal community regards all Jewish settlement­s in the occupied West Bank, including Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem, as illegal. They are seen as major stumbling blocks to peace as they are built on land the Palestinia­ns see as part of their future state. —AFP

 ??  ?? ABU GHOSH, Israel: Mourners carry the coffin of Arab Israeli man, Youssef Ottman, one of three Israeli guards killed in a Palestinia­n shooting attack on a Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank, during his funeral yesterday. — AFP
ABU GHOSH, Israel: Mourners carry the coffin of Arab Israeli man, Youssef Ottman, one of three Israeli guards killed in a Palestinia­n shooting attack on a Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank, during his funeral yesterday. — AFP

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