El Dorado News-Times

Israeli police kill Palestinia­n attacker after Jerusalem stabbing

- By Joseph Krauss

JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli police shot dead a Palestinia­n after he stabbed and wounded an ultra-Orthodox Jew on Saturday near Damascus Gate just outside Jerusalem’s Old City, a tense and crowded area that is often the scene of demonstrat­ions and clashes.

A widely circulated video shot by a bystander appeared to show an officer from Israel’s paramilita­ry Border Police shooting the attacker when he was already lying on the ground, and another appeared to show police with guns drawn preventing medics from reaching him, prompting calls for an investigat­ion into possible excessive use of force.

The Magen David Adom emergency service said it treated an ultra-Orthodox man in his 20s who was stabbed, saying he was in moderate to severe condition.

Israeli police released surveillan­ce video in which the attacker can be seen stabbing the Jewish man and then trying to stab a Border Police officer before being shot and falling to the ground. Police identified the attacker as a 25-year-old from Salfit, in the occupied West Bank.

“The awareness and quick reactions by the police brought about the neutraliza­tion of the terrorist,” police said in a statement. Police could later be seen carrying the body away on a stretcher.

Large numbers of security forces were deployed to the area, where they briefly clashed with a crowd of young Palestinia­ns before dispersing them with tear gas and stun grenades.

Damascus Gate was the epicenter of protests and clashes between Palestinia­ns and Israeli police last spring, during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. The unrest spread to other parts of the city, including a nearby holy site sacred to Jews and Muslims, eventually helping to ignite the 11-day Gaza war.

The Old City is in east Jerusalem, which Israel captured in the 1967 war along with the West Bank and Gaza. Israel annexed east Jerusalem in a move not recognized internatio­nally and considers the entire city its capital. The Palestinia­ns want east Jerusalem to be the capital of their future state, to include the West Bank and Gaza.

There have been dozens of attacks in recent years in and around the Old City, nearly all carried out by individual Palestinia­ns with no known links to armed groups. The Islamic militant group Hamas, which rules Gaza, praised Saturday’s attack but did not take responsibi­lity for it.

The latest attack came a little over a week after a Hamas militant opened fire in the Old City, killing an Israeli and wounding four others before being fatally shot by police. It was unclear if Hamas leaders had ordered the attack or if the man acted alone.

Prime Minister Naftali Bennett expressed support for the police after Saturday’s attack, saying they “acted quickly and with great determinat­ion, as expected from police in Israel, against a terrorist who tried to murder an Israeli citizen.”

But the video showing the assailant being shot while on the ground prompted calls for an investigat­ion.

Esawi Frej, a left-wing Arab minister in Israel’s government, which includes factions from across the political spectrum, said the shooting should be investigat­ed. “Assailants must be shot to save human life, not to have their own lives taken when they no longer pose a threat,” he tweeted.

Palestinia­ns and Israeli rights groups say security forces sometimes use excessive force in response to attacks, killing suspected assailants who could have been arrested or who posed no immediate threat to security forces.

In one widely-publicized case, Israeli soldier Elor Azaria was caught on camera shooting a wounded Palestinia­n attacker who was lying on the ground. Azaria later served two-thirds of a 14-month sentence after being convicted of reckless manslaught­er.

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