The Jerusalem Post

Vandals deface mosque with ‘price-tag’ graffiti

- • By YAAKOV LAPPIN

Vandals defaced a West Bank mosque and torched Palestinia­n vehicles in yet another farright attack overnight on Wednesday, police said.

Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said the incident occurred in Dir Istiya, west of Nablus.

Perpetrato­rs sprayed the name of two West Bank areas where the Civil Administra­tion of Judea and Samaria had destroyed settler structures on Tuesday.

In a pre-dawn raid, the Civil Administra­tion destroyed a small modular home in the Gal Aryeh outpost near the Itamar settlement and later took down some hothouses near the Shiloh settlement in a place called Gal Yosef.

In retaliatio­n, the vandals spray-painted the Hebrew words “Gal Aryeh Yosef” on the mosque’s exterior stone wall.

Rosenfeld added that three cars belonging to Palestinia­ns in the same village were torched.

Police sent a forensic team to the village to gather evidence.

According to Sarit Michaeli of B’tselem, some of the villagers saw the vandals leave the area in a red car and were able to distinguis­h two digits from the license plate number.

Defense Minister Ehud Barak said he ordered security forces to track down those behind the latest incident, describing them as “criminals” aiming to “harm the delicate fabric of life between Israelis and Palestinia­ns in the West Bank, and relations between Israel and its neighbors.”

“These acts distract the IDF from its missions,” Barak said.

The Council of Religious Institutio­ns of the Holy Land issued a statement in the name of the Chief Rabbinate of Israel, the Islamic Waqf and Religious Affairs Ministry of the Palestinia­n Authority, and the Local Churches of the Holy Land condemning the attack.

“The Council calls upon people from all faiths – Christians, Jews and Muslims – to respect all holy places and sites for all three religions, and strongly discourage­s extremists’ behavior that exploits or involves religion in a political/territoria­l dispute,” the statement said.

Last week, Jerusalem saw a far-right attack against Arab property as well as an attempted attack against the Knesset.

Two cars were burned in the Arab neighborho­od of Sharafat, a small neighborho­od located north of Gilo near Beit Safafa. Next to the burned vehicles, police found graffiti with the words “price-tag” and “revenge.”

Jerusalem Post staff, Tovah Lazaroff and Melanie Lidman contribute­d to this report.

 ?? (Abed Omar Qusini/reuters) ?? A MAN points to graffiti spray-painted on the wall of a mosque in Dir Istiya yesterday.
(Abed Omar Qusini/reuters) A MAN points to graffiti spray-painted on the wall of a mosque in Dir Istiya yesterday.

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