Sunday, April 24, 2011

Israelis killed Near Tomb Of Joseph Israeli killed, 4 wounded in West Bank

 
     
JERUSALEM – A Palestinian policeman opened fire Sunday at a group of Israelis who had come to pray at a Jewish holy site in the West Bank without authorization, killing one and wounding four, the Israeli military said.
The shooting threatened to inflame tensions in the West Bank, where Jewish settlers and Palestinians live in uneasy proximity and where settlers have responded to attacks in the past with violent reprisals.
Israeli police identified the dead man as Ben-Yosef Livnat, a Jerusalem resident in his mid-20s. Ben-Yosef was a nephew of Limor Livnat, a prominent hardline Cabinet minister from the ruling Likud Party.
Limor Livnat, who attended the funeral, told reporters that her nephew was killed by a "terrorist disguised as a Palestinian policeman."
She said her nephew was unarmed and "murdered in cold blood because he was Jewish."
"I hope he is the last victim," Livnat said.
Ben-Yosef Livnat and several companions entered the Palestinian city of Nablus early Sunday to visit a site known as Joseph's Tomb.
Jewish worshippers regularly enter the city with a special military escort to pray at the small building traditionally identified as the gravesite of the biblical Joseph, located inside a Palestinian-ruled area. Those visits are coordinated with Palestinian security forces. Israeli and Palestinian officials said Sunday's visit was not cleared with either side.
Palestinian officials notified the Israeli military that the Israelis "were shot by a Palestinian policeman who, after identifying suspicious movements, fired in their direction," the Israeli military said.
Israeli and Palestinian security forces work closely together to prevent violence. A meeting between the sides was scheduled Sunday to discuss the shooting, the military said.
Jibril al-Bakri, the Palestinian governor of Nablus, said the Palestinian Authority was investigating. "The main problem is that they (the Israelis) entered the city without coordination," al-Bakri said.
Israel's defense minister, Ehud Barak, termed the shooting "murder."
"No coordination error can justify such an incident and shooting at innocent people," he said in a statement.
Shortly after the incident, a crowd of Palestinians gathered at the tomb and vandalized the empty building, setting fires inside and throwing stones.
The Yesha Council, an umbrella group representing Jewish settlers, said the shooting proved the Palestinian government could not be trusted.
"The murder committed this morning by Palestinian policemen cannot be ignored," the group said.
Hours later, Jewish settlers attacked Palestinian cars south of Nablus, setting fire to one after its passengers fled and stoning passing vehicles before Israeli soldiers dispersed them.
The Palestinian Authority governs parts of the West Bank, though Israel retains overall security responsibility. Nablus moved from Israeli to Palestinian control in the mid-1990s as part of the Israeli-Palestinian peace process.
In 2000, after deadly fighting around the tomb, Israel's military pulled out and turned the tomb over to the Palestinians. A mob subsequently ransacked and burned the building.
The tomb was later restored. In recent years, thanks to improving security conditions, Jewish worshippers have been traveling to the tomb in organized convoys.
The West Bank has been largely quiet for several years, but tensions remain. The last attack against Israelis in the West Bank occurred in the same area on March 11, when attackers infiltrated a Jewish settlement near Nablus and killed five members of a family, including parents and children ages 11, 4 and three months.
The Israeli military has arrested two Palestinians for that killing.

Associated Press Writer Mohammed Daraghmeh contributed from Ramallah, West Bank, and Nasser Ishtayeh from Nablus, West Bank.

No comments:

Post a Comment