Israeli forces on high alert after deadly Palestinian shooting attack
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[March 30, 2022]
By Maayan Lubell
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli security
forces were on high alert on Wednesday after a Palestinian gunman killed
five people in a Tel Aviv suburb, the latest in a string of fatal
attacks that has stoked fears of wider escalation ahead of the holy
Muslim month of Ramadan.
Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said Israel was facing a "new wave of
terrorism" and called a security cabinet meeting, as police beefed up
their presence in Israeli cities.
The shootings on Tuesday in Bnei Brak, a Jewish ultra-Orthodox city,
raised to 11 the number of people killed by Arab attackers in Israel
over the past week.
It was the sharpest spike in attacks on city streets in years, raising
again for Israelis a familiar sense of insecurity.
Police said the gunman was a Palestinian from Ya'bad, a town in the
occupied West Bank. He was shot dead by police during the shooting
spree.
Witnesses said he had walked methodically through residential
neighbourhoods in Bnei Brak, where he killed a policeman, two Israeli
civilians and two Ukrainian nationals who were veteran workers in
Israel.
An assailant who carried out a stabbing and car ramming attack in the
Israeli city of Beersheba on March 22 and two gunmen in an assault in
the city of Hadera on Sunday were Arab citizens of Israel. Israeli
authorities said those assailants, who were killed during the attacks,
were loyal to Islamic State.
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Mourners embrace at the funeral of Avishai Yehezkel who was killed
during an attack in the Israeli city of Bnei Brak, near Tel Aviv,
Israel, March 30, 2022. REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
condemned the shootings in Bnei Brak, which was not claimed by any
armed group, though residents in Ya'bad linked the assailant to the
leader's Fatah party.
The Israeli military said it had boosted its
deployment in the West Bank and troops were seen patrolling through
Ya'bad. Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid said Israeli security
forces were at their highest level of alert since a Gaza war last
May.
Israeli officials had warned about a potential surge in assaults in
the run-up in April to the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, a period
during which violence has surged in the past.
Nightly Ramadan clashes last year between Palestinians and Israeli
police in East Jerusalem, captured by Israel along with the West
Bank in a 1967 war, helped ignite violence between Israel and Gaza
militants that led to the 11-day war in May.
(Reporting by Maayan Lubell; Additional reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi,
Editing by Jeffrey Heller and Benradette Baum)
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