(Reuters) - A
Palestinian man stabbed up to 10 people on a commuter bus in central Tel
Aviv on Wednesday before he was shot in the leg by a prison security
officer as he tried to escape, police said. Tel Aviv police
commander Bentzi Sau said 10 people had been injured. He said the
assailant was a West Bank resident who stabbed the driver and then
attacked passengers shortly after boarding the bus. Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said the Palestinian was a 23-year-old resident of the town of Tulkarm in the West Bank. A
doctor at Tel Aviv's Ichilov hospital told Army Radio that seven
people had been admitted for treatment, four of whom were seriously
hurt. "Shortly after he
boarded the bus, the assailant stabbed the driver several times but
there was an excellent response from him as he resisted the attack and
in this way the terrorist was stunned," Sau told reporters at the scene. Sau
said a vehicle with prison officers traveling close by saw the attack
and officers gave chase. They caught the man in a nearby street and shot
him in the leg as he tried to escape. The
stabbing was the latest in a string of incidents in the past few months
at a time of heightened tension between Palestinians and Israelis,
particularly in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Israel seized the territories in a 1967 war and Palestinians want them for an independent state, along with Gaza.
Palestinian stabs up to 10 people on Tel Aviv commuter bus
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