ISRAEL ON EDGE
Military deployed to quell violence
The Israeli military began deploying hundreds of troops in cities across the country on Wednesday to assist police in countering a wave of deadly Palestinian shootings and stabbings that have created panic across the country.
The military’s planned deployment of six companies marks the implementation of the first of several measures by Israel’s security Cabinet to counter the attacks, which have intensified dramatically in recent days.
The Cabinet met late into the night and announced steps early Wednesday that included allowing police to seal off points of friction or incitement.
Many of the recent attackers have come from Arab areas of Jerusalem, prompting calls to seal off those neighbourhoods to contain potential attackers. In a new step, Israeli forces placed makeshift checkpoints in Palestinian neighbourhoods in Jerusalem to monitor traffic leaving the areas.
The Cabinet, which was meeting again Wednesday, also decided to strip residency rights and demolish homes of some attackers and draft hundreds more security guards to secure public transport.
Israeli police said 300 soldiers had already been incorporated into their deployment in Israeli cities, while security in Jerusalem had previously been reinforced.
In new violence Wednesday, Israeli police said an Arab attacker stabbed a 70-year-old woman, moderately wounding her, as she attempted to board a bus near Jerusalem’s crowded central bus station. The attacker was shot and killed by forces in the area, police said. Earlier, police said they shot and killed an Arab man after he pulled out a knife and attempted to stab them. His identity was not immediately known.
In the United States on Wednesday, officials said Secretary of State John Kerry plans to travel to the Middle East soon in a bid to ease the deadly violence.
The White House and State Department said details of the trip are not yet determined but could come together quickly. Kerry is due to travel to Europe this weekend on a previously scheduled trip.
Officials familiar with the planning said Kerry would like to meet separately with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in the Jordanian capital of Amman. No three-way meeting is envisioned.
In recent weeks, eight Israelis have died in the string of stabbings, shootings and the stoning of a car, while 31 Palestinians have been killed — 14 of them identified by Israel as attackers, the rest killed in stone-throwing clashes with Israeli forces.
Israel’s internal security minister said Wednesday that the bodies of dead Palestinian attackers would not be returned to their families for burial.
Gilad Erdan said the funeral processions of Palestinians who killed Israelis often turn into “an exhibition of support for terror and incitement to murder.” He said Israel should not allow them to “enjoy respect and ceremonies” after their deaths.
Erdan suggested the attackers be buried without fanfare in distant cemeteries where previous Palestinian killers have been buried.
The comments came after a particularly bloody day Tuesday in which a pair of Palestinian stabbing and shooting attacks in Jerusalem killed three Israelis and another two attacks took place in the normally quiet Israeli city of Raanana. Three Palestinians, including two attackers, were also killed.
The government has been unable to stop the violence, carried out mostly by young Palestinians unaffiliated with known militant groups and apparently acting on their own. The violence erupted a month ago over the Jewish New Year, fuelled by rumours that Israel was plotting to take over Jerusalem’s most sensitive holy site, sacred to both Muslims and Jews. Israel has adamantly denied the allegations.
Clashes continued Wednesday between Israeli troops and Palestinian protesters in the West Bank city of Bethlehem.
Israel’s internal security minister said the bodies of dead Palestinian attackers would not be returned to their families for burial.