Los Angeles Times

Palestinia­n attacks kill American, 4 others

Latest such violence in Israel and the West Bank exacts highest one-day death toll.

- By Batsheva Sobelman Sobelman is a special correspond­ent.

JERUSALEM — Five people were killed Thursday during a series of attacks in Israel and the West Bank, in one of the bloodiest days in the weeks-long wave of violence.

An 18-year-old American student was among the day’s victims.

Officials said two Jewish men were killed when a Palestinia­n man entered the Panorama commercial and office building in Tel Aviv and stabbed them as they were praying in a space designated as a synagogue for visitors.

The assailant fled through a parking area and seriously injured another man before being stopped by bystanders armed with a metal pole. They held the man until police arrived and took him into custody, authoritie­s said.

Medics pronounced one victim dead on the scene; the other died of his wounds at a hospital.

Police identified the suspect as Raed Masalmah, a 36-year-old father of five from the West Bank village of Dura, who worked at a nearby restaurant and entered Israel legally with a permit. He was lightly injured when he was apprehende­d, they said.

The second incident occurred in the West Bank, when a driver emerged from a car by the Alon Shvut settlement and opened fire on a row of vehicles stopped in traffic. The driver then continued to the next junction and rammed the vehicle into a group of pedestrian­s at a crowded bus stop.

According to the Magen David Adom emergency services, the gunfire killed three men riding in three vehicles. Security troops fired at the car and apprehende­d the suspect, a Palestinia­n, officials said.

One of the dead was the American, identified as Ezra Schwartz in a tweet by Israeli police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld. Media reports indicated Schwartz was from Sharon, Mass., and was studying at a yeshiva in Beit Shemesh.

Another of the victims reportedly was a Palestinia­n.

At least four other people were injured during the attack and were taken to Jerusalem for medical treatment, officials said.

Thursday saw the highest one-day death toll in attacks by Palestinia­ns during the recent outbreak of violence.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemned the attacks, which he blamed on the influence of Islamic militancy, and extended condolence­s to the victims’ families.

“Anyone condemning the attacks in France must condemn the attacks in Israel,” Netanyahu said.

The prime minister vowed to continue Israel’s “determined battle against terror,” including measures to demolish homes of perpetrato­rs and revoke their families’ residency. “There is no immunity for terrorists,” he said.

Thursday’s incidents unfolded days before U.S. Secretary of State John F. Kerry is set to arrive for talks in Jerusalem and Ramallah in a bid to stem the violence that has claimed scores of lives in the last two months.

Kerry is scheduled to meet with Netanyahu on Tuesday to discuss the implementa­tion of Israeli confidence-building measures.

The secretary of State is to meet the same day with Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas.

 ?? Moshe Mizrachi
AFP/Getty Images ?? AN ISRAELI victim is evacuated after a stabbing in Tel Aviv that left two Jewish men dead. In the West Bank, a gunman killed a U.S. student and two other men.
Moshe Mizrachi AFP/Getty Images AN ISRAELI victim is evacuated after a stabbing in Tel Aviv that left two Jewish men dead. In the West Bank, a gunman killed a U.S. student and two other men.

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