(Reuters) - Two
suspected Palestinian men armed with axes and knives killed four people
in a Jerusalem synagogue on Tuesday before being shot dead by police,
Israeli police and emergency services said, the deadliest such attack in
the city in years. The attack took place shortly
after dawn in an ultra-Orthodox neighborhood of West Jerusalem. Pictures
posted by an Israeli army spokesman on the Internet showed a man in a
Jewish prayer shawl lying dead, a bloodied butcher's cleaver discarded
on the floor and overturned prayer tables. "We
are viewing this as a terrorist attack," said police spokesman Micky
Rosenfeld. Israel's ambulance service said at least eight people were
seriously wounded. Police said at least one of the assailants was from East Jerusalem, the predominantly Palestinian side of the city. Palestinian
radio reports described the attackers as "martyrs" and the Islamist
group Hamas praised the attack. Loudspeakers at mosques in Gaza called
out congratulations. "Hamas calls
for the continuation of revenge operations and stresses that the Israeli
occupation bears responsibility for tension in Jerusalem," Hamas
spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said. Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu blamed the attack on both Hamas and
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who he accused of urging
Palestinians towards violence. "This
is a direct result of incitement led by Hamas and Abu Mazen, incitement
that the international community has been irresponsibly ignoring," he
said in a statement. "We will respond with a heavy hand to the brutal murder of Jews who came to pray and were killed by lowly murderers." Violence
in Jerusalem, areas of Israel and the Israeli-occupied Palestinian
territories has surged in the past month, fueled by a dispute over
Jerusalem's holiest shrine, which has given rise to fears of a religious
conflict. Five Israelis and a
foreign visitor have been deliberately run over and killed or stabbed to
death by Palestinians. About a dozen Palestinians have also been
killed, including those accused of carrying out those attacks. On
Monday a Palestinian bus driver was found hanged in a vehicle in
Jerusalem. Israeli police, citing autopsy results, said he had committed
suicide but the driver's family said they suspected foul play and the
incident led to clashes. Hamas called for retaliation after the bus driver's death. Residents
trace the violence in Jerusalem to July, when a Palestinian teenager
was burned to death by Jewish assailants, an alleged revenge attack for
the abduction and killing of three Jewish teens by Palestinian militants
in the occupied West Bank. The
summer war in Gaza and a row over access to a Jerusalem compound that is
sacred to Muslims and Jews alike have also been triggers for violence. The
synagogue attack was the worst in the city since 2008, when a
Palestinian gunman shot dead eight people in a religious seminary school
in the city. Media reports said
one of the synagogue attackers was armed with a gun and a hospital
spokesman said two people were being treated for gunshot wounds, but
police did not immediately confirm that either of the attackers fired a
gun.
Four dead in suspected Palestinian attack on Jerusalem synagogue
Reuters
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