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Seven killed in synagogue attack as West Bank violence spirals

JERUSALEM: A Palestinian gunman killed seven people and wounded three others in a synagogue on the
outskirts of Jerusalem on Friday (Jan 27) in an attack that heightened fears of a spiral in bloodshed, a day
after the deadliest Israeli raid in the West Bank in years.
 
Police said the gunman arrived at around 8.15pm and opened fire, hitting a number of people before he was
killed by police. TV footage showed several victims lying in the road outside the synagogue being tended to
by emergency workers.
 
"We arrived to the scene extremely quickly and it was horrible. Injured people lying on the street," said
Shimon Alfasi, from the Israeli ambulance service.
 
The attack, which police described as a "terrorist incident", underlined fears of an escalation in violence
after months of clashes in the West Bank culminating in a raid in Jenin on Thursday that killed at least nine
Palestinians.
 
Police said in a statement that the gunman was a 21-year-old Palestinian resident of East Jerusalem who
appeared to have acted alone in carrying out the attack in an area that Israel annexed to Jerusalem after the
1967 Middle East war.
 
It said he had tried to flee by car but was pursued by police and shot dead.
 
A spokesman for the Islamist group Hamas hailed the action as "a response to the crime conducted by the
occupation in Jenin and a natural response to the occupation's criminal actions". The smaller militant group
Islamic Jihad also praised the attack without claiming responsibility.
 
In Ramallah, the largest city in the occupied West Bank and Gaza, news of the attack brought spontaneous
street gatherings and outbreaks of celebratory gunfire, while outside the Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem,
where some of the wounded were treated, crowds chanted "Death to Terrorists".
 
In a sign of the potential for further escalation, the Palestinian health ministry said three Palestinians were
taken to hospital after being shot by an Israeli settler in an incident near the northern West Bank city of
Nablus.
 
It added that a 16-year-old Palestinian who was shot by Israeli forces in a separate incident on Wednesday
succumbed to his wounds.
 
Following an assessment with security authorities, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu urged people not to
take the law into their own hands but said measures had been decided and cabinet would meet on
Saturday.
 
Friday's shooting, which occurred on International Holocaust Remembrance Day during Shabbat, the Jewish
day of rest, was condemned by the White House and UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, who urged
"utmost restraint". It came days before a planned visit by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken to Israel and
the West Bank.
 
Israel's national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, leader of one of the hardline nationalist parties in
Netanyahu's new government, visited the site of the attack, where he was greeted with a mixture of cheers
and anger.
 
"The government has to respond, God willing this is what will happen," he told a waiting crowd.

Palestinians celebrate Jerusalem synagogue attack that killed 7 Israelis

Jerusalem (Jubilee) Synagogue


Israeli civilians massacred, after deadly west bank raid
Seven Israeli killed in Jerusalem synonagogue attack
Palestinian praise attack as revenge for jenin raid
Seven people were killed in a synagogue shooting attack on the outskirts of Jerusalem. The Israeli police
described it as a "terror attack" that took place in Neve Ya'akov. The Israeli police said a Palestinian gunman
sprayed bullets on Israeli civilians outside the synagogue. The incident comes a day after an Israeli raid in
the West Bank killed at least 10 Palestinians.
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Nine Palestinians killed in Israeli raid in occupied West Bank
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