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Israeli bus station attack: IDF soldier killed, police mistakenly shoot dead foreigner

Author : RT | Editor : Admin | October 20, 2015 at 02:40 PM


It was initially reported that the attacker had an accomplice, who was wounded and detained by the police. It later turned out that the Israeli security forces had shot dead a foreign national after mistaking him for the assailant.

Police responding to the attack, entered the bus station and saw a “foreign national.” They opened fire and wounding him, Halevy confirmed. The man later died in hospital.

The Jerusalem Post reported that the man was a citizen of Eritrea, who has been living in Israel.

An angry Israeli crowd, chanting “death to Arabs” gathered outside the bus station after the attack, Reuters reported.

The Sunday attack has become the most serious incident in the string of violence in Israel caused by tensions surrounding a Jerusalem holy site, the al-Aqsa mosque, which is sacred to both Muslims and Jews.

“The terrorists don't stop. This is a stepping up from knife attacks to shooting,” Eli Ben-Dahan, Deputy Defense Minister, said after the incident.

"I call again on the government to expel the families of terrorists. This is the only step that will deter them from carrying out the next terrorist attack," Ben-Dahan said, as cited by The Jerusalem Post.

Over the last two weeks, seven Israelis have died in knife attacks on streets or on buses carried out by the Palestinians. The death toll on the Palestinian side is 41 people, which includes the attackers and protesters shot dead by the Israeli security forces.

Arab workers ‘banned’ from schools in Tel Aviv

Meanwhile, Tel Aviv and the nearby cities of Rehovot and Hod Hasharon announced that all cleaners and maintenance workers would not be allowed into schools under a temporary ban. The jobs in question are mostly occupied by the Arab citizens.

“Owing to the sensitive situation, the municipality of Tel Aviv-Jaffa will not permit the entry of construction workers and laborers – Jews and Arabs alike – to educational institutions for on-going work,” Gali Avni-Orenstein, Tel Aviv spokeswoman, said in an emailed response to Reuters.

A statement by Tel Aviv municipality also said that "after the end of the school day, contract workers may perform their work as usual.”

A similar ban was introduced by the city of Modiin-Maccabim-Reut, which opted to say “minority members” in its announcement – a term often used to describe Arabs in the Jewish state.

Israeli Interior Ministry urged “all mayors to continue to act with respect and equality towards all their workers, irrespective of religion, ethnicity or gender,” but didn’t instruct them to lift the ban.

The Ministry of Education said that it was not releasing any specific guidelines regarding non-educational staff in schools due to not being responsible for contracting those workers, Arutz Sheva website reported.

The Joint List party, representing the Arab minority in Israel, has slammed the bans by the cities as “racist.”

Prominent Joint List MP, Dov Khenin, has addressed the Knesset Interior Committee to hold an urgent hearing on the matter.

“As a result of the public anxiety, dangerous racist and exclusionary moves are being made that stain entire populations, violate basic rights and undermine the possibility of building a different future here,” Khenin said, as cited by Haaretz.


- Source : RT

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