Lodi News

Shooting at Jerusalem synagogue leaves 7 dead

Gwen Ackerman

A gunman shot to death seven Israelis in an attack on a synagogue in a Jewish neighborhood of East Jerusalem as tensions soared following the Thursday killing of nine Palestinians in a clash with Israeli security officials in the West Bank.

Police who raced to the scene shot and killed the assailant. Israeli media reported he was 21, from East Jerusalem and without a history of political violence.

It was one of the highest death tolls in an attack on Israelis in years and was bound to lead to exceptional outrage since the dead were worshipers leaving Sabbath prayers.

While no group claimed responsibility, in the Gaza Strip, the Islamic Hamas movement celebrated by firing into the air, and in the West Bank cars honked and fireworks were shot into the sky.

Fatah, the main branch of the Palestine Liberation Movement, said in a statement that the Palestinian people “are not helpless” and called the attack the “inevitable result” of the Israeli occupation’s latest actions.

Israel’s Channel 12 reported that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was planning to call an emergency meeting with security officials.

The deteriorating situation will dominate U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s trip to the country next week.

The Palestinian health ministry reported late Friday that an Israeli car approached the West Bank village of Bita, near Nablus, and shot three Palestinians, who were taken to hospital, one in serious condition.

The Thursday gunfight with Israeli soldiers in the city of Jenin left eight militants and one civilian dead. It was one of the highest daily death tolls in the West Bank in years and sparked retaliatory attacks from both sides. The violence adds to domestic tensions.

“The international community and the U.S. are watching Israel because of the new government,” said Gayil Talshir, a political scientist at Hebrew University, speaking of Netanyahu’s recently sworn-in Cabinet. “It’s a more extremist right-wing government than Israel has ever had.”

Netanyahu’s coalition took office a month ago after pledging to implement policies such as loosening open-fire rules for some security forces.

The new administration, which includes far-right figures, has also proposed expanding or building more settlements in the West Bank, where Palestinians are seeking to establish an independent state.

WORLD

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2023-01-28T08:00:00.0000000Z

2023-01-28T08:00:00.0000000Z

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