(Reuters) - A
Palestinian man threw a chemical substance believed to be acid at an
Israeli family in the occupied West Bank on Friday, injuring a man and
four children, Israeli police and the military said. The assailant was shot and wounded immediately after the attack, which took place at a checkpoint south of Jerusalem. Police
spokeswoman Luba Samri said the attacker had "poured an unknown
substance suspected to be acid on a Jewish family." She said a
civilian at the scene shot and wounded the assailant. The Israeli military said the Israeli man had stopped to pick up the Palestinian as a hitchhiker and then the attack occurred. The
incident comes at a time of heightened tension between Palestinians and
Israelis, particularly in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, territories
Israel seized in a 1967 war and Palestinians want for an independent
state, together with Gaza. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack. Over
the past four months, 10 Israelis and a foreign visitor have been
killed by Palestinians in knife or car-based attacks, while at least a
dozen Palestinians have also been killed, including most of those who
carried out the killings. On
Wednesday, a Palestinian minister died shortly after a confrontation
with an Israeli border policeman in the West Bank. The policeman grabbed
the minister by the neck during a scuffle and minutes he collapsed with
breathing problems. An
Israel official who attended the autopsy said the minister had died of a
heart attack possibly brought on by stress, while the Palestinian
pathologist concluded that the grab to the neck more directly lead to
heart failure. In the Gaza
Strip, tens of thousands marched in celebration of the 27th anniversary
of the founding of the Islamist Hamas group, in the largest show of
support for the organization there since a five-week war with Israel
that ended in August. In
the hostilities, more than 2,100 Palestinians were killed, most of them
civilians, Palestinian officials said. More than 70 Israelis were also
killed, most of them soldiers. Fathy
Hammad, a former cabinet minister, saw the large turnout as showing
Hamas remained popular despite the war's devastation and the hardships
of an Egyptian and Israeli blockade of the coastal territory. "Once one road is blocked, another one opens," Hammad said. But
he cautioned against Palestinian frustration with what they see as a
slow pace of efforts to rebuild homes and other property, warning this
could bring about further confrontation. "We
will extract reconstruction by our rifles, if there will be no
rebuilding, there will be another explosion," Hammad told those gathered
at a rally in Gaza's Jebalya refugee camp.
Palestinian wounds five Israelis in suspected acid attack
![](CustomImage/get/700/500/dd9b3ab153ea5b7aa45bcfb6.jpg)
Reuters
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.