New escalation: attack on synagogue in Jerusalem

According to preliminary information from the Israeli police, the attacker waited in front of the synagogue in New Yaakov, an Israeli settlement in occupied East Jerusalem, on Friday evening until the believers left the building. Then he opened fire. Seven people died, according to the Magen David Adom emergency services, at least three others were injured. According to the police, the attacker was “neutralized” at the scene following the attack.

The US described the attack as “absolutely appalling”. Washington condemns this “suspected terrorist attack in the strongest possible terms,” ​​said a spokesman for the State Department in Washington. “Our thoughts, prayers and condolences go out to those who were killed and injured in this heinous act of violence.” The act was “absolutely appalling”. The Austrian Foreign Ministry also condemned the attack “strongly”. “There is no excuse for attacking places of worship,” the State Department wrote on Twitter.

Archyde.com/Ronen Zvulun

There was an attack on a synagogue in East Jerusalem

Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank responded with celebrations. Eyewitnesses reported militants shooting up in the air and pouring into the streets on Friday night. A spokesman for Gaza’s ruling Hamas said the attack was “in retaliation for the Israeli army’s attack on the Jenin refugee camp on Thursday.”

Deadly raid in Jenin

In the past few days, the security situation had deteriorated significantly once more. The Israeli army carried out a raid in the occupied West Bank, killing nine people in the Jenin refugee camp on Thursday. The Israeli army spoke of an “anti-terrorist operation”. In addition, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health, a man was killed by Israeli soldiers in al-Ram near Jerusalem on Thursday. In response, Palestinian militants fired rockets, which were intercepted.

The radical Islamic Jihad group said the rockets were “part of a message” to show that “Palestinian blood doesn’t come cheap.” Both Islamic Jihad and Hamas, which competes with it for dominance in Gaza, have vowed vengeance. Israel, in turn, responded with airstrikes once morest Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

Blinken travels to the Middle East

US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken wants to try to de-escalate during an upcoming visit to the Middle East on Monday and Tuesday. He wants to travel to Israel, the occupied West Bank and Egypt. He will meet Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for the first time since he took office as head of the far right-wing Israeli government. A meeting with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is also planned.

The aim of the talks is “to take steps to de-escalate tensions in order to end the cycle of violence,” said State Department spokesman Ned Price in Washington. The White House expressed similar concern regarding the “increasing spiral of violence in the West Bank as well as the rockets from Gaza”. Washington urgently urges a “de-escalation,” said National Security Council spokesman John Kirby. France had also appealed to the parties to the conflict to “refrain from a further escalation of violence”.

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