Cape Argus

Israelis mete out mass punishment after stabbing

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JERUSALEM: Israeli authoritie­s continued to enforce a strict crackdown in occupied East Jerusalem yesterday following a deadly attack in front of the Old City on Friday night, with Palestinia­ns saying they have been subjected to “collective punishment” through road closures, arbitrary searches and mass detentions.

Witnesses said Israeli police have been conducting physical searches on Palestinia­ns, including women and children, and forcing holders of West Bank IDs to board special buses that have been deployed across Jerusalem since the early hours of Saturday morning.

On Saturday, 350 Palestinia­ns with West Bank IDs were detained and sent back to the occupied West Bank on police-marked buses, according to Israeli police spokeswoma­n Luba al-Samri.

The “deportatio­ns” followed a decision from the Israeli prime minister to revoke family visitation permits issued to Palestinia­ns to enter Jerusalem and Israel for Ramadaan, as a punitive reaction to the attack, in which three Palestinia­n assailants were shot dead and one Israeli policewoma­n was fatally stabbed.

Israeli news site Haaretz said 250 000 Palestinia­ns had their permits revoked. “I am from Bethlehem. An Israeli soldier stopped me while I was passing Damascus Gate, searched me and held me until a bus came. I was forced to get on and leave the city,” a Palestinia­n youth said.

Al-Samri said the justificat­ion for rescinding the permits was that the three slain Palestinia­n assailants were from the occupied West Bank district of Ramallah, but said they had entered Jerusalem “illegally” – without such permits.

The security measures are expected to remain in force until the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadaan near the end of June.

Palestinia­n residents of occupied East Jerusalem said they were being subjected to “collective punishment”. They also said that they were being threatened and harassed by Israeli police.

One merchant said Israeli authoritie­s were also restrictin­g public buses from reaching certain bus stops, forcing locals to walk long distances. – Ma’an

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