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Driver Injures 17 In Jerusalem Terrorist Attack

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  • Driver Injures 17 In Jerusalem Terrorist Attack

    DRIVER INJURES 17 IN JERUSALEM TERRORIST ATTACK
    Matthew Fisher

    Canada.com
    September 22, 2008
    Canada

    JERUSALEM - A driver, described as a terrorist by Israeli authorities,
    ran amok in a busy intersection near the Old City's storied Jaffa
    Gate just before midnight Monday, injuring 17 pedestrians, before
    being shot dead by an Israeli soldier.

    "We can confirm it was a terror attack," senior police spokesman
    Micky Rosenfeld said. "The man was shot and killed."

    Jerusalem's police chief, Aharon Franco, said the driver had turned
    "his car towards a group of soldiers who were at an intersection."

    The black BMW used in the attack was registered to a Palestinian man
    in a Palestinian suburb of the city. The soldiers who were hit were
    apparently on their way to the Western Wall City to say prayers of
    penitence before the Jewish High Holidays that begin next week.

    After the incident, which seriously injured two, about 15 shots
    clearly could be heard as far as several kilometres away. The shots
    were followed by a pause, and then three or four more shots were fired.

    Police quickly sealed off the area, which is perhaps the most heavily
    travelled tourist route into the walled Old City. The Jaffa Gate
    leads into the Christian and Armenian Quarters. It's popular with
    pilgrims on their way to visit the Western Wall, which is Judaism's
    most sacred site, the Dome of the Rock, which is Islam's third-most
    sacred site, and Church of the Holy Sepulchre, where Jesus is said
    to have been buried.

    The area was the scene of heavy fighting during Israel's War of
    Independence in 1948.

    Although Jerusalem has not had a suicide bombing for some time,
    nerves in the city, which both Israelis and Palestinians claim as
    their capital, have been on edge since two terrorist attacks in July
    that also used vehicles as weapons.

    In the first attack, three Israelis were killed and 30 wounded when
    a Palestinian man drove a bulldozer into a bus before being shot
    dead. Ten days later, another Palestinian tried to drive a bulldozer
    into several Israeli vehicles. The man was shot and killed but not
    before wounding about 30 people.

    Eight Israeli religious students were shot and killed by a Palestinian
    man last March in Jerusalem.

    Israeli authorities often receive intelligence in advance of such
    attacks, but they had no specific information this time, Franco,
    the Jerusalem police chief, told Ynetnews. But the police have been
    on a high state of alert because of the Muslim month of Ramadan and
    the approaching Jewish New Year.

    In the first official reaction to the attack, Defence Minister Ehud
    Barak repeated a call for new procedures that would allow Israeli
    authorities to destroy the homes of terrorists to deter others from
    carrying out such attacks.

    Barak has been negotiating with Tzipi Livni about whether his party
    wishes to stay in the Kadima-led coalition.

    Livni, who won the Kadima leadership last week, was asked by President
    Shimon Peres on Monday to try to form a new government, replacing
    the one led by outgoing Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who is quitting
    because he has been implicated in a corruption scandal.
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