Muscat Daily

Jerusalem: New attack after mass shooting

The new gun attack took place hours after a gunman killed 7 outside a synagogue

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Jerusalem - A 13-year-old Palestinia­n boy shot and wounded a father and son in east Jerusalem on Saturday hours after a gunman killed seven outside a synagogue, raising fears of escalation despite internatio­nal calls for calm.

Police said the latest gun attack occurred on Saturday morning in Silwan just outside the old, walled city in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem.

A father, 47, and his 23-yearold son sustained gunshot wounds to their upper bodies and were rushed to hospital, police and medics said.

Police had earlier announced the arrest of 42 people in connection with Friday’s synagogue attack, one of the deadliest in Jerusalem in years.

The mass shooting was car

ried out by a 21-year-old Palestinia­n resident of east Jerusalem who drove up to the synagogue in the Neve Yaakov settler neighbourh­ood and opened fire during the Jewish Sabbath.

The attack coincided with In

ternationa­l Holocaust Remembranc­e Day.

It came with tensions rising across the region a day after one of the deadliest army raids in the occupied West Bank in roughly two decades, as well as rocket fire from militants in the

Gaza Strip and Israeli retaliator­y air strikes.

Crowds shouted ‘Death to Arabs’ as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu toured the scene of the synagogue attack late on Friday.

Palestinia­ns held sponta

neous rallies to celebrate the killings in Gaza and across the West Bank, including in Ramallah where large crowds swarmed the streets chanting and waving Palestinia­n flags.

Opposition lawmaker Mickey Levy, from former premier Yair Lapid’s centrist Yesh Atid party, warned the surging violence recalled the second intifada, the 2000 to 2005 Palestinia­n uprising that brought devastatio­n to both sides.

“What happened 20 years ago, it’s (starting) to happen right now,” he told AFP.

“We need to sit, think how we can advance and stop this situation.”

Arab condemnati­on

The Palestinia­n Authority in a statement said Israel was ‘fully responsibl­e for the dangerous escalation’, without commenting on the two gun attacks.

Israel’s police chief Kobi Shabtai called the synagogue shooting ‘one of the worst attacks (Israel) has encountere­d in recent years’.

Several Arab nations that have ties with Israel - including Egypt, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates - condemned Friday night’s shooting.

But the Lebanese group Hezbollah, one of Israel’s most prominent foes, praised the attack as ‘heroic’, voicing ‘ absolute support for all the steps taken by the Palestinia­n resistance factions’.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said he was ‘ deeply shocked’ by the ‘terrible’ Jerusalem attacks and that his country ‘stands by the side of Israel’.

French President Emmanuel Macron said a ‘spiral of violence must be avoided at all costs’, with Russia also calling for ‘maximum restraint’.

The White House has also condemned the violence, with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken due in the region next week on a trip where he is expected to call for de-escalation.

The gunman at the synagogue was killed by police during a shootout that followed a brief car chase after the attack.

There has been no indication that he had prior involvemen­t in militant activity or was a member of an establishe­d Palestinia­n armed group.

Authoritie­s have not yet definitive­ly identified the synagogue attacker, but Israeli and Palestinia­n media have widely named him as Alqam Khayri, who was being praised on some social media platforms including his Facebook page. Shimon Israel, who lives near the synagogue and witnessed the attack, said he was sitting down for Shabbat dinner when he heard ‘shooting and shouting’.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Israeli security forces and emergency service personnel gather at a cordoned-off area in Jerusalem's Arab neighbourh­ood of Silwan on Saturday
(AFP) Israeli security forces and emergency service personnel gather at a cordoned-off area in Jerusalem's Arab neighbourh­ood of Silwan on Saturday

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