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Knife, gun attacks on Israelis kill at least 4 as lull ends

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ALERT. Israeli borderguards stand guard at the site of an attack in the Jewish settlement bloc of Gush Etzion, south of Jerusalem, in the Israeli occupied West Bank, on November 19, 2015. AFP photo / Ahmad Gharabli

JERUSALEM (Updated) – Two separate Palestinian attacks targeting Israelis killed at least four people Thursday, November 19, including a stabbing in Tel Aviv and a West Bank gun and car-ramming assault, shattering a lull in weeks-long violence.

It was among the bloodiest days for Israelis since the wave of violence broke out on October 1.

The first attack saw a 36-year-old Palestinian storm an office building in commercial capital Tel Aviv with a knife, killing two Israelis.

Police said the suspect was stopped by officers and civilians, wounded and arrested. 

According to police, the Palestinian attacked two people around a shop on the second floor of the building then ran downstairs and stabbed a third person before being stopped.

Israeli security forces identified the attacker as from the Hebron area in the occupied West Bank. 

Those killed were men aged around 20 and 50, police said. The third victim suffered wounds in the upper body, hospital officials said.

Further details remained unclear and there were varying reports on how the attack played out. 

One of the victims reportedly took refuge in a room inside the building that serves as a Jewish prayer area.

Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said that the attacker attempted to enter a synagogue inside the building.

"I heard cries and my Arab employee told me, 'He's stabbing,'" Israel Bachar, a 65-year-old who runs a nearby print shop, told AFP.

"I left my store and I saw a man on the ground being stabbed. I threw a piece of wood that was on the ground and the terrorist got up and ran after me. I hid in a nearby store."

Bachar said the victim, a longtime friend, later died in his arms.

The building where the attack occurred, known as the Panorama building in southern Tel Aviv, hosts a variety of shops and offices.

Shots fired

Later in the day, at least one assailant opened fire from a car near a Jewish settlement south of Jerusalem before crashing into pedestrians. 

Three people were killed in the gun attack, with at least one of them confirmed as Israeli and another a suspected attacker. A number of others were wounded.

The West Bank attacker was shot, the army said, but the assailant's condition was not clear. There were conflicting reports on whether there was more than one attacker.

The incident occurred at a junction near the Gush Etzion block of Jewish settlements, according to police.

Details of the West Bank attack were still emerging. The army spoke of shots being fired, then of the attacker "intentionally" ramming his car into the pedestrians.

"Forces on sight fired towards the vehicle, identifying a hit," an army statement said.

Prior to Thursday, the last significant attack dates back to November 13, when an Israeli rabbi and his son were shot dead in an ambush as they drove in an area near Hebron, the focus of much of the unrest.

The violence since the start of October has killed at least 84 people on the Palestinian side, including one Arab Israeli, and at least 15 Israelis.

Many of the Palestinians killed have been alleged attackers, while others have been shot dead in clashes with Israeli security forces.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in his meeting with US President Barack Obama on November 9, was said to have spoken of measures aimed at easing tensions amid the wave of Palestinian gun, knife and car-ramming attacks.

Israel's response to the violence has at times been controversial, such as the demolition of suspected attackers' homes and allegations of excessive force in the killings of some alleged assailants.

On Tuesday, Israel banned the radical wing of the country's main Islamist organisation, accusing it of having instigated violence at a sensitive Jerusalem holy site that preceded the wave of unrest.

Some questioned whether the ban would further stoke tensions and also harm legitimate political debate.– Rappler.com

 


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