Global Times

Israel boosts Jerusalem troop deployment

Move comes after twin blasts in the city kill 1 teenager, injure at least 18

- Xinhua

“The IDF, the Shin Bet internal security agency and the police are deployed in the area at this very moment to ensure that there will be no further attacks.”

Israel’s police were boosting forces throughout Jerusalem on Wednesday after twin blasts shook the city, killing an Israeli-Canadian teenager and injuring at least 18 others.

The blasts were caused by explosive devices, according to a statement issued by the police. One of them went off at a busy bus stop near the entrance of the city during the morning rush hour while the second device exploded about half an hour later at another bus station in Ramot, a settlement neighborho­od in northern Jerusalem.

The police identified the fatality as Aryeh Schupak, a 15-year-old Canadian citizen who was a student at a Yeshiva (Jewish seminary) in Jerusalem. He succumbed to his wounds in the hospital shortly after the blast and hundreds attended his funeral in Jerusalem.

Eli Bin, director-general of Israel’s

Magen David Adom emergency medical service, told reporters that at least 18 people were wounded, one of whom sustained critical wounds and two others were in serious condition.

No group has claimed responsibi­lity for the attacks yet.

Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid vowed that Israel will track down the perpetrato­rs. “The security forces will reach them,” he said in a video statement.

In an urgent security assessment meeting called by Lapid, it was decided to order the reinforcem­ent of forces in the Jerusalem area in the coming days.

“The IDF [Israel Defense Forces], the Shin Bet internal security agency and the police are deployed in the area at this very moment to ensure that there will be no further attacks,” he said.

State-owned Kan TV reported that the police believe the devices were planted at the scenes before dawn and activated via mobile phones.

Large forces of police and paramilita­ry border police officers were searching the city for more possible bombs. Police Commission­er Kobi Shabtai urged citizens to be vigilant for suspicious objects.

The attacks came as former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu is holding talks to form a new coalition government after his Likud party’s far-right allies won the parliament­ary election on November 1.

Yair Lapid

Israeli Prime Minister

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