The Mercury News

Israel prepares to demolish home of Palestinia­n gunman

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Israel on Sunday sealed the home of an east Jerusalem man who killed seven people outside a synagogue, in a preliminar­y step ahead of the expected demolition of the building, as two Palestinia­n men died from Israeli fire.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Cabinet approved an order to seal the home of a second Palestinia­n shooter — a 13-yearold boy who wounded two Israeli men in east Jerusalem on Saturday. His Cabinet also took steps toward approving other punitive measures against the families of Palestinia­n attackers, including potentiall­y stripping them of citizenshi­p rights and deporting them.

The moves by Israel, along with escalating violence, further raised tensions as U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken landed in the region. Blinken's high-wire diplomatic act, focused largely on restoring calm, begins today after he completes a brief visit to Egypt.

Earlier on Sunday, Israeli police sealed up the east Jerusalem home of a 21-yearold Palestinia­n attacker who killed seven people and wounded three outside a synagogue on Friday night during the Jewish sabbath. The attacker was shot and killed by police.

“We sealed the home of the terrorist who carried out the horrendous attack in Jerusalem, and his home will be demolished,” Netanyahu told his Cabinet.

“We are not seeking an escalation, but we are prepared for any scenario. Our answer to terrorism is a heavy hand and a strong, swift and precise response,” he said.

The planned home demolition is among a series of punitive steps, including plans to “strengthen” its West Bank settlement­s, announced by Israel in the wake of the twin shootings.

Palestinia­ns, meanwhile, reported dozens of attacks by Jewish settlers in the occupied West Bank. The most serious took place in the Palestinia­n town of Turmus Ayya, where the official Wafa news agency quoted residents as saying that settlers torched a car and set a home on fire.

Later Sunday, Netanyahu's office said the Cabinet would seal the family home of the 13-year-old shooter as well. Israel typically demolishes attackers' homes only in deadly attacks. The boy's victims were both badly wounded but survived Saturday's shooting.

His office also said the Cabinet was pushing ahead with plans that could strip residency and citizenshi­p rights of the families of Palestinia­n attackers, and potentiall­y deport them to the occupied West Bank. Such moves have been condemned by human rights groups as collective punishment.

Police said the attacker, identified as 21-year-old Khairy Alqam, was killed in a shootout with officers Friday night after fleeing the scene in the predominan­tly ultra-Orthodox east Jerusalem settlement of Neve Yaakov.

 ?? ARIEL SCHALIT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mourners attend the funeral of Israeli couple Eli and Natalie Mizrahi, victims of a shooting attack Friday in Jerusalem, at the cemetery in Beit Shemesh, Israel, Sunday.
ARIEL SCHALIT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mourners attend the funeral of Israeli couple Eli and Natalie Mizrahi, victims of a shooting attack Friday in Jerusalem, at the cemetery in Beit Shemesh, Israel, Sunday.

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