You are on page 1of 3

TERRORISM

Palestinian driver kills 2, wounds 5 in Jerusalem shooting rampage, police


say
Published October 09, 2016

Oct. 9, 2016: An Israeli emergency worker looks into a car covered with bullet
holes. (REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun)
JERUSALEM A Palestinian motorist launched a shooting spree near the Israeli
police headquarters in Jerusalem Sunday, killing two people and wounding five
others before being shot dead, Israeli police and emergency services said.
Police spokeswoman Luba Samri said the attacker sped toward a busy stop of
the city's light rail and opened fire, seriously wounding a 60-year-old woman
waiting there. He then continued driving and shot another woman who was
seated in her car before speeding off toward an Arab neighborhood in east
Jerusalem. Samri said police officers on motorcycles chased the assailant, who

eventually stepped out of his vehicle and opened fire at them. A 30-year-old
police officer was critically wounded in the shootout.
A separate police force ultimately shot and killed the attacker, Samri said. She
identified him as a 39-year-old man from the east Jerusalem neighborhood of
Silwan. Israeli media reported the man had previously served multiple sentences
for violent acts and was due to report to prison Sunday for another sentence
over assaulting a police officer.
Israel's Magen David Adom emergency medical service said it treated seven
people for various gunshot injuries, two of whom later died of their wounds.
Police cordoned off the area of the shooting and briefly shut down traffic on
the light rail.
The attack was an unusual one in the yearlong spate of Palestinian assaults since
most have been stabbings. Sunday's was the deadliest attack on Israelis since
June 8, when two Palestinians opened fire and killed four people at a popular Tel
Aviv food market.
The Palestinian attacks began around last year's Jewish high holidays and have
since killed 36 Israelis and two visiting Americans. About 219 Palestinians have
been killed during that period, with Israel saying the vast majority of them were
attackers.
Israel has warned that the potential for violence could rise as the Jewish high
holidays approach once again and has beefed up its security presence. There has
been a recent surge in Palestinian attacks that shattered weeks of relative calm
and raised fears of a return to the near-daily attacks seen previously.
Israel has blamed the violence on incitement by Palestinian political and religious
leaders, compounded on social media sites. The Palestinians say it is rooted in
some 50 years of military occupation and dwindling hopes for independence.
Fawzi Barhoum, a spokesman for Gaza's Islamic Hamas leaders, welcomed the
attack in a statement saying it was "a natural response." Hamas stopped short of
taking responsibility for the attack but identified the assailant as one of its
members.
Internal Security Minister Gilad Erdan said there were no specific warnings of
an attack ahead of time and the quick response of security forces on the scene
prevented a deadlier result. He repeated his previous criticism of social media
sites that allow militants to spread their messages of incitement.

"It has an impact. It pushes people out to the streets to commits acts of
murder and terror," he said.

You might also like