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Israeli synagogue attack

Getty

Getty

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has promised a heavy-handed response after two Palestinians attacked a Jerusalem synagogue with a gun and meat cleavers, killing four rabbis and wounding eight others.

Three of the victims held dual US-Israeli citizenship and the fourth man was a British-Israeli ational, police said.

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Mr Netanyahu repeated accusations that the head of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas, incited the attack and promised to destroy the homes of those responsible.

“This is a direct result of incitement led by Hamas and Abu Mazen, incitement that the international community has been irresponsibly ignoring,” he said.

“We will respond with a heavy hand to the brutal murder of Jews who came to pray and were killed by lowly murderers.”

Mr Abbas condemned the attack, which came after weeks of unrest fuelled in part by a dispute over Jerusalem’s holiest site, known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary – containing the Al-Aqsa mosque, the third holiest in Islam – and to Jews as the Temple Mount because the two Biblical temples once stood there.

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Israeli security personnel outside the synagogue that was the scene of the attack. Photo: Getty

“The presidency condemns the attack on Jewish worshippers in one of their places of prayer in West Jerusalem and condemns the killing of civilians no matter who is doing it,” he said in a statement.

A worshipper in the Kehillat Bnei Torah synagogue in an ultra-Orthodox neighbourhood of Jewish West Jerusalem said about 25 people were praying in a service when shooting broke out.

“I looked up and saw someone shooting people at point-blank range. Then someone came in with what looked like a butcher’s knife and he went wild,” Yosef Posternak told Israel Radio.

Photos distributed by Israeli authorities showed a man in a prayer shawl lying dead, a bloodied butcher’s cleaver on the floor and prayer books covered in blood.

Palestinian media named the assailants as Ghassan and Udai Abu Jamal, cousins from the Jerusalem district of Jabal Mukaber, where clashes broke out as Israeli security forces moved in to make arrests.

Their family said they were reacting to the heavy Israeli presence in East Jerusalem which Israel conquered in 1967 and subsequently effectively annexed despite international opposition.

They said the attackers were motivated by an ongoing feeling of oppression by the Israelis.

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Four extra paramilitary police battalions will be deployed in Jerusalem and a recruitment drive targeting citizens with firearm licences was underway to bolster Jerusalem’s civil guard, but Mr Netanyahu also sought to calm tempers, warning Israelis not to take the law into their own hands.

“As a nation we will settle the score with every terrorist and their dispatchers, and we have proved we will do so, but no one may take the law into their own hands, even if spirits are riled and blood is boiling,” Mr Netanyahu said.

“We are in a long campaign in a war against terrorism. There are some who want to uproot us from our state and capital. They will not succeed. We are in a battle over Jerusalem, our eternal capital.

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Photo: Getty

“This evening, I ordered the destruction of the houses of the Palestinians who carried out this massacre and to speed up the demolition of those who carried out previous attacks,” he said, reiterating a pledge made on November 6 just days after a Palestinian rammed his car into pedestrians, killing two in the second such hit-and-run attack in a fortnight.

“Citizen of Israel, I call on you to demonstrate great vigilance and to respect the law because the state will bring to justice all the terrorists and those who dispatch them.”

Israel would also “step up enforcement and harshen the penalties” against anyone or any organisation involved in incitement, he said.

A secular Palestinian militant group claimed responsibility for the attack, but their involvement could not be confirmed and Israeli officials said initial investigations found no link to an organisation.

Mr Netanyahu linked the attack to inflammatory statements about the flashpoint Al-Aqsa mosque compound made by the Palestinian Authority, the Islamist Hamas movement and Israel’s Islamic Movement, a religious advocacy group.

Known to Jews as the Temple Mount, the compound is sacred to both faiths and one of the most sensitive sites in the Middle East.

“Hamas, the Islamic Movement and the Palestinian Authority are spreading no end of libels … against the state of Israel,” he said.

“They say that the Jews are defiling the Temple Mount, they say that we are planning to destroy the holy places there, that we are intending to change the prayer rites there.

“It’s all a lie. And these lies have already cost a very high price,” he said, listing the Israeli victims of recent Palestinian attacks in Jerusalem.

“Today more victims were added to their number due to this crazy blood libel.”

But Palestinian officials have blamed Mr Netanyahu for provoking the explosion of religious violence in which Israelis and Palestinians have died.

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