Two
dead in Jerusalem as Palestinian-Israeli violence rages on
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[October 10, 2015]
By Maayan Lubell
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli security
forces shot dead two Palestinians in East Jerusalem on Saturday, one of
whom had stabbed two Israelis, police said, in a further wave of
violence that has raised concerns about a new Palestinian uprising.
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Police said two ultra-Orthodox Jewish men were wounded in the
knife attack by a 16-year-old Palestinian near Jerusalem's walled
Old City. Earlier, paramilitary police shot dead a militant who had
opened fire at them during late-night clashes at the Palestinian
Shuafat refugee camp, police said.
Hamas, the Islamist Palestinian militant group which controls the
Gaza Strip, said in a statement that the Shuafat shooter was one of
its members. "The hero martyr fought the Israeli occupation with
language they understand," Hamas said.
Tensions have surged in 11 days of violence in which four Israelis
and 17 Palestinians - including several Palestinians shot by police,
have been killed in Jerusalem, the Israeli-occupied West Bank, Gaza
and in Israeli cities.
Scores of Palestinians have been injured in clashes with Israeli
troops and at least 12 Israelis have been wounded in almost daily
Palestinian stabbing attacks.
The violence has been fueled by Palestinian fears that visits by
Jewish groups, including lawmakers, to the Jerusalem Old City plaza
revered in Judaism as the site of two destroyed biblical temples are
eroding Muslim religious control of the al-Aqsa mosque compound,
Islam's third holiest shrine.
NETANYAHU PLEDGES STATUS QUO
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said repeatedly he
will not allow any change to the arrangements under which Jews are
allowed to visit the site but non-Muslim prayer is banned.
His assurances over conditions at the site, known as Temple Mount to
Jews and Noble Sanctuary to Muslims, have done little to quell alarm
among Muslims across the region.
The violence is not of the intensity of two Palestinian uprisings in
the late 1980s and early 2000s but it has prompted talk of a third
"intifada".
On Friday Israeli soldiers shot dead seven Palestinians in protests
near the Gaza border and a knife-wielding Israeli wounded four Arabs
in the southern Israeli town of Dimona.
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In the northern town of Afula, an Israeli-Arab woman was shot
several times and wounded by police who closed in on her as she held
up a knife, a video clip circulated on social media showed. Police
said she had tried to stab a bus station guard.
In Jerusalem's Old City, a Palestinian stabbed and wounded a
14-year-old Jewish boy, and near a Jewish settlement in the West
Bank city of Hebron, a Palestinian stabbed an Israeli policeman
before being shot dead.
There was also violence in the West Bank city of Ramallah, with
video footage showing an Israeli army jeep running over a
stone-throwing Palestinian, who was injured.
Also on Friday, the Israeli military said Gaza militants fired a
rocket into southern Israel. No group claimed responsibility. The
attack caused no casualties or damage.
Both Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas have called
for calm and Palestinian police continue to coordinate with Israeli
security forces to try to restore order, but there are few signs of
the violence dying down.
Palestinians want East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza - lands
Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East war, for a future state.
U.S.-brokered peace talks broke down in April 2014.
(Additional reporting by Ali Sawafta in Ramallah and Nidal
al-Mughrabi in Gaza; Writing by Maayan Lubell; Editing by Mark
Heinrich)
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