The Sunday Telegraph

Palestinia­n boy shoots Israeli father and son

Assault in Jerusalem comes a day after the deadliest attack on Israeli civilians in a decade

- By James Rothwell in Neve Yaakov and Campbell MacDiarmid in Beirut

A 13-YEAR-OLD Palestinia­n gunman shot two people in east Jerusalem yesterday, a day after the deadliest attack on Israeli civilians in a decade.

The shooting in the Palestinia­n neighbourh­ood of Silwan badly wounded a father, 47, and his 23-yearold son, the ambulance service said.

Security footage showed the victims to be observant Jews, wearing skull caps and tzitzit, or knotted ritual tassels.

Before police arrived, two people legally carrying weapons shot and overpowere­d the teenage gunman.

A police spokesman described the shooting as a “terrorist attack” and said the assailant “was neutralise­d”.

The shooting came a day after a Palestinia­n killed seven Israelis and two days after a deadly raid by the Israeli military on Jenin refugee camp.

The mounting violence – on the eve of the arrival of Antony Blinken, the US secretary of state, to the region – has raised fears of a new escalation in the long-running conflict.

Speaking ahead of a meeting of his Security Cabinet yesterday, Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, promised a “strong, swift and precise” response.

Last night, he laid out his government’s response to the attacks. “We are deploying forces. We are reinforcin­g units in various sectors. We will seal and demolish terrorists’ homes in expedited processes to exact an additional price from those who support terrorism,” he said.

“I will submit to the Security Cabinet additional steps in the fight against terrorism. This includes significan­tly hastening and expediting the licensing of weapons for authorised civilians. I will also submit the revocation of national insurance rights from families that support terrorism.”

After visiting the scene of Friday’s attack near a synagogue on the outskirts of Jerusalem, Mr Netanyahu called for “determinat­ion and composure”, while calling on people not to take the law into their own hands.

Regional players are watching the situation with concern, with Saudi Arabia warning of the need to limit escalation.

“The kingdom condemns targeting civilians, stressing the necessity of stopping the escalation, reviving the peace process and ending the occupation,” the foreign ministry said.

Yesterday morning, Jewish residents gathered at the scene of Friday’s shooting in Neve Yaakov and wept as they recounted a night of blood and horror.

‘He is neither the first nor the last to get martyred. What he did is a source of pride’

“I heard shooting, and first I thought it was Palestinia­n neighbours shooting [celebrator­y gunfire] next to us,” said Shimon Israel, 45, an army veteran.

“I saw a mess. I saw a guy shooting at the corner of the synagogue. There were already bodies in the streets. My neighbour ran out to the guy and he shot him. His wife came running after him and gave CPR. He came and shot at her. The shooter aimed his gun up. I crawled on the floor and he shot the window.”

Four victims have been identified: married couple Eli and Natali Mizrahi, aged 48 and 45 respective­ly, Rafael BenEliyahu, 56, and Asher Natan, 14.

At least two other people were wounded, including a 60-year-old woman who remained in hospital in a moderate condition. A 24-year-old remained sedated on a ventilator.

Israeli police killed the gunman following a brief chase after the shooting. He was identified as Khairi Alqam, a 21-year-old resident of east Jerusalem.

His father Moussa Alqam said his son had been an ordinary person with no militant ties.

“He is neither the first nor the last young man to get martyred and what he did is a source of pride,” he said.

Following the attack, Israel’s military said it was boosting its presence in the West Bank with an additional battalion.

Meanwhile, Israel’s police force was placed on the “highest level” of alert. Police said they had arrested 42 people for questionin­g, “some of them members of the terrorist’s family”.

Police said others detained included residents of the gunman’s neighbourh­ood, where footage showed Palestinia­ns dancing and cheering in celebratio­n of the shooting.

Tensions were already near boiling point in the West Bank, following an Israeli military raid on the refugee camp of Jenin in the West Bank on Thursday.

An elderly woman was among nine people killed in the raid, which Israel said targeted Islamic Jihad militants plotting an attack on Israelis.

Volodymyr Zelensky, the Ukrainian president, expressed his condolence­s and said a Ukrainian citizen was among the dead.

 ?? ?? Emergency services swarmed the scene of yesterday’s attack, in which two people were shot by a 13-year-old
Emergency services swarmed the scene of yesterday’s attack, in which two people were shot by a 13-year-old

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