Police kill 2 Palestinian gunmen after Jerusalem attack
U.S. student killed Tuesday in attack in Jaffa
Two Palestinian gunmen carried out shootings in Jerusalem before police shot and killed them, Israeli police said. A Palestinian man was seriously injured in the shootout.
The incident began when passengers on an Israeli bus spotted the two gunmen on the street and heard shots fired, said police spokeswoman Luba Samri. No injuries were reported. A motorist responded by shooting toward the suspects, who fled by car.
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Police began searching for the gunmen's vehicle. When a policeman approached a car that matched the description, the gunmen raised their weapons at the officer and he fired at them. Other police units on the scene shot at the suspects, killing them, Samri said. The shootout took place on a main road alongside Jerusalem's light rail train tracks and close to the New Gate of Jerusalem's Old City.
A Palestinian civilian at the scene was shot in the head and is in a serious but stable condition, an Israeli hospital said. Police are investigating whether he was shot by the gunmen or by police.
Police identified the two gunmen as Palestinians, both about 20 years old, from the Jerusalem area.
Wave of attacks
In the West Bank on Wednesday, a Palestinian with a knife attempted to stab Israeli soldiers at a checkpoint, and soldiers shot and killed him, the Israeli military said. Also, an Israeli stabbed and lightly injured a Palestinian in the West Bank, apparently during a business-related argument, police said. The Israeli fled the scene and police are searching for him.
A wave of near-daily Palestinian assaults on Israeli civilians and security forces erupted in mid-September and shows no sign of abating. The bloodshed — mainly stabbings but also shootings and car-ramming attacks — has killed 28 Israelis. During the same time, at least 179 Palestinians were killed by Israeli fire. Most of the Palestinians have been identified by Israel as attackers, while the rest were killed in clashes with security forces.
Meanwhile, U.S. Vice-President Joe Biden on Wednesday criticized Palestinians for a "failure to condemn" a Palestinian stabbing spree that killed an American student and war veteran, after Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' political party posted a statement online praising the stabber.
Taylor Force, U.S. student visiting Israel, was stabbed to death by a Palestinian yesterday; 12 others hurt. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/CBC?src=hash">#CBC</a> <a href="https://t.co/JAd74PVnRS">pic.twitter.com/JAd74PVnRS</a>
—@DerekStoffelCBC
The stabbing spree took place Tuesday near the sea in the city of Jaffa, where Biden was meeting with Israel's former president Shimon Peres nearby. Biden said his wife and grandchildren were having dinner on the beach not far from the scene of the attack, which injured a dozen Israelis, civilians and police officers.
Abbas' Fatah party posted a cartoon on its Twitter account of a hand holding a knife over a map of Israel and the Palestinian territories, and calling the Palestinian stabber from Tuesday's attack a "hero" and "martyr."
"This is the result so long as Israel does not believe in the two-state solution and ending its occupation," the Fatah statement on Twitter read.
In a joint press conference with Biden, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemned Fatah's glorification of the stabber.
Both leaders spoke highly of the American stabbing victim, Taylor Force, a 28-year-old MBA student at Vanderbilt University and a West Point graduate who served tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan.
"The kind of violence we saw yesterday, the failure to condemn it, the rhetoric that incites that violence, the retribution that it generations, has to stop," Biden said.
The U.S. vice-president spoke warmly of his decades-long relationship with Netanyahu, and reemphasized American's commitment to Israel's security.
Biden is in Israel for a two-day visit as part of a regional tour of the Mideast. He is meeting both Israeli and Palestinian leaders. There were speculations he would try to revive the moribund Israeli-Palestinian peace talks, but Biden said, "I didn't come with a plan. I just came to speak with a friend," referring to Netanyahu.